RoerRT 

BROWNINS 


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ROBERT  BROWNING. 


The    Complete    Poetic    and     Dramatic 
Works  of  Robert  Browning. 

Cambridge  Edition.  In  one  volume,  printed  on  clear 
type,  opaque  paper,  and  attractively  bound.  With  a 
Biographical  Sketch,  Notes,  Indexes,  a  new  portrait,  an 
engraved  title-page,  and  a  vignette  of  Asolo.  Crown  8vo, 
gilt  top,  S3.00  ;  half  calf,  gilt  top,  ^5.00  ;  tree  calf  or  full 
levant,  ^7.00. 

Complete  Poetic  and  Dramatic  Works. 

Riverside  Edition.  With  text  as  revised  and  rearranged 
by  Mr.  Browning,  a  Steel  Portrait,  and  Indexes.  Com- 
plete in  six  volumes,  crown  Svo,  gilt  top,  each  ^1.75  ;  the 
set,  cloth,  ^10.00  ;  half  calf,  ^20.00  ;  half  calf,  gilt  top, 
^21.00;  half  levant,  ^24.00. 

A  Quide=Book  to   the  Poetic  and  Dra= 
matic  Works  of  Robert  Browning. 

By  George  Willis  Cooke.  Crown  Svo,  uniform  with 
the  Riverside  Browning.     ^2.00. 

A  Browning  Phrase=Book. 

By  Marie  Ada  Molineux,  A.  M.,  Ph.  D.  Svo,  uni- 
form with  Cambridge  Browning,  with  wide  margins  for 
annotation,  S3.00 ;  also,  uniform  with  the  Riverside 
Browning,  $3.00. 

The     Life     and      Letters      of     Robert 
Browning. 

By  Mrs.  Sutherland  Orr.  With  a  Portrait  and 
View  of  Browning's  Study.  Uniform  with  Browning's 
Works.     2  vols,  crown  Svo,  ^3.00. 

Robert  Browning :    Personalia. 

By  Edmund  Gosse.    With  a  Portrait.    i6mo,  75  cents. 

HOUGHTON,  MIFFLIN  &  CO. 
Boston  and  New  York. 


\y' 


A  PHRASE  BOOK 

FROM 

THE   POETIC  AND    DRAMATIC  WORKS 

OF 

ROBERT  BROWNING 

BY 

MARIE  ADA  MOLINEUX,  a.m.,  ph.d. 


TO  WHICH  IS  ADDED  AN  INDEX 

CONTAINING    THE   SIGNIFICANT    WORDS 

NOT  ELSEWHERE  NOTED 


BOSTON    AND    NEW  YORK 

HOUGHTON,  MIFFLIN  AND   COMPANY 

(2ri)E  fiitctis'i&e  press,  Camliriboc 

1S96 


CopjTTight,  1896, 
By  marie  ADA  MOLDfEUX. 

All  rights  reserved. 


The  Riverside  Press,  Cambridge,  Mass.,  U.  S.  A. 
Electrotyped  and  Printed  by  H.  O.  Houghton  &  Co. 


^■0 


IJBKAKY 

UIS'IVERSn  V  OF  CALIFORNH 
SAiSTA  liAKLJARA 


TO 

THE    FIEST    THREE    PRESIDENTS    OF 

THE  BOSTON  BROWNING  SOCIETY 

HENKY  STONE 

THOMAS  WENTWORTH  HIGGINSON 

WILLIAM   JAMES    ROLFE 

THIS    BOOK 
IS  GRATEFULLY  DEDICATED 


HISTORICAL  SKETCH 

Some  years  ago  the  editor  of  the  present  voUime  planned  and 
began  work  upon  a  complete  Concordance  to  the  poems  of 
Robert  Browning.  So  far  as  is  known,  this  antedated  any 
similar  effort.  The  time  was  unpropitious  and  the  work  was 
laid  aside.  The  formation  of  "The  Boston  Browning  Society" 
in  the  winter  of  1885-86  gave  an  impetus  to  the  study  of 
the  poet,  and  seemed  to  make  some  kind  of  cooperation  possi- 
ble. On  June  6,  1889,  the  Society  held  a  special  meeting  at 
the  Brunswick,  to  which  all  persons,  whether  members  of  the 
Society  or  not,  that  were  interested  in  a  Browning  Concord- 
ance, were  invited.  Colonel  Thomas  Wentworth  Higginson,  the 
second  President  of  the  Society,  was  in  the  chair.  After  a  state- 
ment of  plan  and  some  discussion,  and  the  discovery  that  the 
work  of  the  present  editor  antedated  that  of  the  Philadelphia 
Society,  that  had  very  generously  offered  to  the  Boston  Society 
the  concordance  to  "  Pauline  "  already  made  by  it,  as  a  nucleus 
for  any  further  enterprise,  a  committee  was  appointed  to  take 
the  matter  in  charge.  At  first  the  number  was  limited  to  three, 
Dr.  "William  J.  Rolfe,  Chairman,  Miss  INI.  A.  Molineux,  and  the 
secretary  of  the  Society,  Mrs.  John  Rand,  who  would  be  able 
from  her  position  to  aid  much  in  communicating  with  other 
members  and  in  various  ways,  as  well  as  in  doing  some  portion 
of  the  literary  work.  The  second  member  of  the  committee 
insisted  that  a  committee  of  this  importance  would  be  quite  in- 
complete without  Colonel  Higginson,  and  he  was  added,  there- 
fore, although  he  found  it  impossible  to  attend  many  of  the 
meetings  and  was  able  to  assist  only  by  advice.  The  committee 
was  empowered  to  add  to  its  number  as  seemed  advisable.  The 
plan  was  to  have  the  subject-matter,  as  represented  bj'  the 
Riverside  Edition  (loose  sheets  of  which  were  kindly  supplied 
by  Messrs.  Houghton,  Mifflin  &  Company),  divided  among  six 
ladies,  Dr.  Rolfe  to  edit  the  wo-rk  when  completed.  Very  early 
in  the  course  of  the  proceedings  the  chairman  announced  that 


vi  HISTORICAL  SKETCH 

he  shoultl  l)e  unable,  from  press  of  other  engagements,  to  do  the 
editing,  and  proposed  instead,  that  the  second  member  of  the 
committee  slioukl  do  it,  as  she  already  had  in  hand  the  most 
difficult  portion,  "  The  Ring  and  the  Book."  It  was  decided 
that  a  concordance  was  too  bulky  and  unnecessarily  elaborate  an 
emprise,  and  that  it  would  be  hard  to  find  any  publisher  willing 
to  undertake  a  book  so  expensive  and  little  remimerative,  while 
a  phrase-book  might  be  made  to  fill  all  the  important  needs  of 
student  and  writer,  and  at  the  same  time  be  acceptable  to  any 
one  with  a  few  minutes  of  leisure,  wishing  to  refresh  mind  and 
heart  with  a  wise  or  beautiful  sentence  from  the  writings  of  the 
poet  that  more  than  any  other  since  Shakespeare  understood  the 
inmost  soul  and  motives  of  the  human  race  in  all  the  varied 
manifestations. 

The  summer  time  was  thought  the  most  advantageous,  as  the 
period  of  most  leisure,  and  the  ladies  departed  for  their  summer 
haunts,  each  armed  with  a  volume. 

Alas  !  when  autumn  came  little  had  been  accomplished,  and 
from  various  causes  several  ladies  had  been  obliged  to  relinquish 
the  work  and  several  volumes  had  changed  hands.  As  the  years 
went  on  and  nothing  of  importance  was  done  except  by  Mrs. 
Grace  A.  Oliver,  Mrs.  Rand,  and  Miss  Molineux,  the  different 
portions  of  merely  attempted  work  (some  volumes  entirely  un- 
touched) were  sent  by  Dr.  Rolfe  to  Miss  Molineux.  Meanwhile 
the  original  plan  had  become  much  modified.  Instead  of  repeat- 
ing each  phrase  three  or  four  times  under  as  many  different 
catch-words,  it  was  suggested  by  Dr.  Rolfe  that  a  "  one-word 
index  "  should  be  substituted,  and  it  is  believed  that  this  some- 
what novel  feature  will  be  fomid  an  efficient  and  convenient 
substitute.  It  was  with  regret  that  the  editor  was  obliged  to 
entirely  revise  and  add  to  the  work  done  by  Mrs.  Oliver  and  Mrs. 
Rand,  who  had  so  faithfully  and  enthusiastically  finished  their 
respective  volumes. 

After  the  manuscript  was  in  the  possession  of  the  publishers 
a  new  complication  arose.  An  edition  of  Browning's  complete 
works  to  be  contained  in  one  volume  was  projected,  and  it 
seemed  advisable  to  add  references  to  tliat  as  well  as  to  the  first 
and  second  Riverside  editions.  The  editor  was  easily  convinced 
that  it  would  be  for  the  advantage  of  every  one  concerned  to 
carry  out  this  scheme.  The  delay  incident  to  an  entire  revision 
of  the  work  for  this  purpose  has  postponed  the  publication  until 
this  time,  when  the  Boston  Browning  Society,  under  the  auspices 
of  which  it  was  so  long  ago  begun,  has  almost  ceased  to  expect 


HISTORICAL  SKETCH  vii 

its  completion.  Although  the  first  of  the  three  to  whom  the 
book  was  inscribed  has  passed  from  earth,  the  dedication  is 
left  as  it  was  written.  It  is  permitted  to  speak  more  openly 
of  the  dead  than  of  the  living,  and  the  editor  may  acknowledge 
her  special  indebtedness  to  Colonel  Stone,  through  whose  cour- 
tesy, and  that  of  his  wife,  the  secretary,  she  received  an  invita- 
tion to  the  first  meeting  of  the  Society. 


"  €\)\V}e  noTanD  to  tie  ©arfi  (Cotuer  came." 


"TO   THE  DILIGENT   READER" 

The  order  of  the  phrases  has  been  modified  from  the  strictly 
alphabetical  in  the  one  case  of  the  nouns  and  their  compounds. 
The  declensional  order  is  taken  and  the  compound  of  eacli  ease 
follows  next,  before  proceeding  further  in  the  declension.  At 
first  it  was  also  planned  to  treat  the  verbs  similarly  and,  in  con- 
sequence of  the  change  from  this  first  intention,  it  is  possible 
that  a  verb-form  or  two  may  be  found  out  of  order  and  immedi- 
ately following  the  main  verb,  having  inadvertently  escaped  the 
many  eyes  overlooking  the  publication. 

When  spelled  alike  the  noun  and  adjective,  or  the  noun  and 
verb,  appear  in  groups  mider  the  same  catch-word  in  the  order 
of  their  position  in  each  volume  of  the  Riverside  Edition,  the 
noun-group  always  having  precedence. 

The  attempt  has  been  made  to  print  the  punctuation  of  the 
original  intact,  except  for  the  ending  of  most  phrases  where  no 
stop  was  made  by  the  Poet  at  that  especial  word.  Occasionally 
a  dash  has  been  used  to  denote  suspension,  or  to  suggest  the 
note  of  interrogation  that  comes  several  lines  farther  along  on 
the  original  page,  or  a  semicolon,  note  of  exclamation,  or  interro- 
gation has  been  left  as  in  the  context,  even  when  taste  would 
have  substituted  the  period.     Dots  replace  omitted  words. 

Italics  where  important  have  been  left  ;  but  some  phrases, 
such  as  those  from  the  songs  in  "  Pippa  Passes,"  have  been  put 
in  Roman  letters.  In  the  main  it  has  been  the  endeavor  to  omit 
no  mark  that  would  aid  the  searcher  in  identifying  a  desired 
quotation,  whetlier  looking  in  this  volume  only  or  in  tracing  it 
to  the  page  of  either  the  seven  volunae  or  six  volume  "  River- 
side," or  the  one  volume  "  Cambridge"  editions;  where  change 
has  been  made  in  the  readings  in  the  latter  and  newer  edition, 
the  older  has  been  followed  except  where  a  misprint  was  obviously 
corrected. 

In  the  first  volume  of  the  older  edition  "  Pauline  "  is  repeated 
at  the  end,  after  Page  412,  as  an  Appendix,  paged  as  at  the  be- 


X  "TO   THE   DILIGENT  HEADER" 

ginning,  but  with  the  addition  of  a  star  to  differentiate  it  as  the 
Revision  by  the  Poet.  In  several  instances  a  phrase  from  this 
poem  has  been  repeated  when  there  has  been  any  notable  change 
in  the  revised  version. 

There  are  no  quotations  from  the  "  Alkestis  "  and  the  "  Hera- 
kles  "  of  Euripides,  nor  the  "  Agamemnon  "  of  iEschylus,  since 
these  are  translations  and  not  original  work.  Many  words  will 
be  found  only  in  the  Index,  because  the  phrases  in  which  they 
occur  are  comparatively  unimportant  for  quotation,  or  the  words 
themselves  alone  are  noteworthy.  Especial  pains  has  been  taken 
with  the  compounds,  a  remarkable  feature  in  Browning's  style, 
although  he  does  not  always  divide  a  compound  by  a  hyphen  even 
when  spelled  identically  ;  for  instance,  Up-thrust,  Sor.  1 :  195. 
C.  75.  Upthrust,  Sor.  1  :  287.  C.  111.  The  English  editions 
are  aU  marred  by  careless  proof-reading,  and  in  consequence 
some  contradictious  must  be  left  for  fear  of  correcting  what  the 
Poet  expressly  intended  to  stand. 

In  the  Index  words  compounded  with  prefixes,  such  as  "a," 
"re,"  "un,"  precede  the  forms  without  a  hyphen,  just  as  if  the 
prefix  had  standing  as  an  independent  word.  It  is  thought  that 
this  arrangement  will  facilitate  search,  when  once  understood, 
and  at  the  same  time  call  attention  to  the  variety  of  the  com- 
pounds. Some  subjects  of  little  extraneous  value  have  been 
given  but  one  reference  —  such  are  Molinism  and  Jansenism. 
The  distinction  of  noun  and  verb  references,  the  noun-group 
having  precedence,  has  been  confined  to  the  phrases. 

M.  A.  M. 


ABBREVIATIONS 


Abt  V Abt  Vogler. 

Adam Adam,  Lilith,   and 

Eve. 

Agam Agamemnon. 

Andrea Andrea  del  Sarto. 

Another Another     Way     of 

Love. 
Any  Wife  . . .  .Any   Wife   to    any 

Husband. 
Apol.  and  F.  .Apollo       and      the 

Fates. 

App.  FaU Apparent  Failure. 

Appear Appearances. 

Arcades Arcades  Ambo. 

Ari.  A Aristophanes' Apol- 

Artemis Artemis  Prologizes, 

At  the  M At  the  Mermaid. 

Bad  D.  I Bad  Dreams  I. 

Bad  D.  II Bad  Dreams  II. 

Bad  D.  III. .  .Bad  Dreams  III. 

Bad  D.  IV.  . .  Bad  Dreams  IV. 

Balaii Balaustion's       Ad- 
venture. 

Bean-St Bean-Stripe. 

Bean-F Bean-Feast. 

Bea.  Sig Beatrice  Signorini. 

Ben  Ezra Habbi  Ben  Ezra. 

Ben  K Ben   Karshook's 

Wisdom. 

Ber.  de  M.  . .  .  Bernard  de  Mande- 
viUe. 

Bifur Bifurcation. 

Bishop  B Bishop  Blougram's 

Apology. 

A  Blot A  Blot  in  the 

'Scutcheon. 

Boot Boot  and  Saddle. 

Boy  and  Ang.The   Boy   and    the 
Angel. 

By  Fire By  the  Fireside. 

Caliban Caliban  upon  Sete- 

bos. 

Camel-D Camel-Driver. 

Cardin The  Cardinal    and 

the  Dog. 


Chas.  A Charles  Avison. 

Childe  K ChUde  Roland- 
Chris. -Eve.  . .  .Cliristma.s-Eve. 

Chris.  Sm Christopher  Smart. 

Colombe Colombe's  Birth- 
day. 

The  Confess.  .The  Confe.ssional. 

Confess Confessions. 

Count  G Count  Gisraond. 

Crist Cristina. 

Crist,  and  M . .  Cristina    and  Mon- 
aldeschi. 

Dan.  Bar Daniel  Bartoli. 

Deaf  and  D. . .  Deaf  and  Dumb. 
Death  in  D. ..A     Death    in    the 

Desert. 

De  Gus De  Gustibus. 

Dev .  .Development. 

Dis  Al Dis  Aliter  Visum. 

Doctor Doctor 

Druses The  Return  of  the 

Druses. 

Earth's  Im. . .  .Earth's  Immortali- 
ties. 

Eas.-Day Easter-Day. 

Englishm The  Englishman  in 

Italy. 

Ecliet Echetlos. 

Epil.  A Epilogue    to    Aso- 

lando. 
Bean-St . .  Epilogue   to   A 
Bean-Stripe. 
Camel-D.  .Epilogue  to  Camel- 
Driver. 
Cher Epilogue    to    Cher- 
ries. 
Dra.  P. .  .Epilogue  to  Drama- 
tis Personse. 
Eagle  . . .  .Epilogue  to  Eagle. 
Family. .  .Epilogue  to  Family. 

Fif Epilogue    to   Fifine 

at  the  Fair. 

Fer Epilogue  to  Ferish- 

tah's  Fancies. 
Melon-S.  .•  Epilogue  to  Melon- 
Seller. 


ABBREVIATIONS 


Epil,  Mihrab.  Epilo^e    to    Mih- 
rab  8hah. 

Pacch.  . .  .Epilojfue  to  Pacch- 
iarotto. 

Pillar  ....  Epilofjue    to  Pillar 
at  Sebzevar. 

Plot-C....Epilo},'ue    to    Plot- 
Culture. 

Shah  A..  .EpilosTie    to    Shah 
Abbas. 

Sun Epilofjue     to    The 

Sun. 

Two  Cam.Epilofnie    to     Two 
Camels. 
Eurydice Euiydice   to  Or- 
pheus. 
Evelyn Evelyn  Hope. 

Family The  Family. 

Fears ...    Fears     and      Scru- 
ples. 

Ferish Ferish tab's  Fancies. 

Fifine Fifine  at  tlie  Fair. 

Fil.  Bald Filippo  Baldinueci. 

FUght Flight  of  the  Duch- 
ess. 

Flower's The  Flower's  Name. 

Flute-M Flute-Mu.sic. 

Forgiv Forgiveness. 

Founder  Founder    of    the 

Feast. 

Era  Lippo  ....  Era  Lippo  Lippi. 

Fr.  Fu Francis  Furini. 

Fust Fust       and       his 

Friends. 

Garden  F Garden  Fancies. 

Geo.  B.  D George  Bubb   Dod- 

ington. 

Ger.  de  L Gerard  de  Lairesse. 

Give Give  a  Rouse. 

Glove The  Glove. 

GoldH Gold  Hair. 

Gondola In  a  Gondola. 

Gram.  Fun. . .  .A    Grammarian's 

Funeral. 
Guard,  Ang. . .  The      Guardian 

Angel. 

Hal.  and  Hob  Halbert  and  Hob. 
Helen's  T.  . .  .Helen's  Tower. 
Her.  Trag. . .   Heretic's   Tragedy. 

Herv4 Herv^  Kiel. 

Holy-C Holy-Cross  Day. 

Home-T.  A. . .  Home-Thoughts 

from  Abroad. 
Home-T.  S Home-Thoughts 

from  the  Sea. 


How  it  S How   it   Strikes    a 

Contemporary. 

How How  They  Brought 

the  Good  News. 

Humil Humility, 

Imp.  Aug "  Iraperante  Augus- 

to  Natus  Est  —  " 

In  a  B In  a  Balcony. 

Inap Inapprehensive- 

ness. 

In  a  Y In  a  Year. 

Incident Incident    of    the 

French  Camp. 

Inn  A Inn  Album. 

IiLStans Installs  Tyrannus. 

In  Three  D.  .  .In  Three  Days. 

ItaUan Italian  in  England. 

Ivkn Ivkn  Iv^novitch. 

J.  Lee James  Lee's  Wife. 

Joeh Joehanan     Hakka- 

do.sh. 
Joh.  Agri Johannes  Agricola. 

Karsh Epistle  of  Karshisb. 

King  C King  Charles. 

King  V King  Victor. 

La  S La  Saisiaz. 

Lab The  Laboratory. 

Lady The  Lady  and  the 

Painter. 

Last  R The  Last  Ride  To- 
gether. 

Light  W A  Light  Woman. 

Life  in  L A  Life  in  a  Love. 

Lost  L The  Lost  Leader. 

Lost  Mis The  Lost  Mistress. 

Love Love     among     the 

Ruins. 

Love  in  L Love  in  a  Life. 

Lovers'  Q. . . .  A  Lovers'  Quarrel. 

Mag.  Nat Magical  Nature. 

Marching Marching  Along. 

Mar.  Rel Martin  Relph. 

Mary  W Mary    Wollstone- 

craft. 

Ma.ster  H Master  Hugues. 

May  and  D.  .  .May  and  Death. 

Meeting Meeting  at  Night, 

Melon Melon-.Seller. 

Memor Memorabilia. 

Mesmer Mesmerism. 

Miscon Misconceptions. 

Mihrab Mihrab  .Shah. 

Moses Note  to  Joehanan. 


ABBREVIATIONS 


Xlll 


M.-m.  Meg. .  .Muekle- mouth 
Meg. 

Muyy MiU^ykeh. 

My  Last  D. . .  .My  Last  Duchess. 

Nat.  in  D Nationality      in 

Drinks. 

Nat.  Mag Natural  Magic. 

Ned  B Ned  Bratts. 

Never Never  the  Time. 

Numph Numpholeptos. 

Old  Pict Old    Pictures    in 

Florence. 

One  Way One  Way  of  Love. 

One  Word ....  One  Word  More. 

Paceh Pacchiarotto. 

Pan Pan  and  Luna. 

Para Paracelsus. 

Parting Parting  at  Morning. 

Pau Pauline. 

Pearl A  Pearl,  A  Girl. 

Phei Pheidippides. 

Pict.  Ig Pictor  Ignotus. 

Pied   Piper. .  .  Pied  Piper  of  Hame- 
lin. 

Pietro Pietro  of  Ahano. 

PiUar Pillar  at  Sebzevar. 

Pippa Pippa  Passes. 

Pisgah  I   Pisgah-Sights  I. 

Pisgah  II Pisgah-Sights  II. 

Plot-C Plot-Culture. 

Ponte  A Ponte  dell'  Angelo, 

Venice. 

Pope  and  N..  .The  Pope  and  the 
Net. 

Popul Popidarity. 

Porph Porphyria's  Lover. 

Pretty  W Pretty  Woman.  _ 

Prince  H Prince   Hohenstiel- 

Schwangau. 

Prol.  A Prologue    to    Aso- 

lando. 
Dra.  I.  2d. Prologue  to  Drama- 
tic    Idyls.     Sec- 
ond Series. 

Fer Prologue  to  Ferish- 

tah's  Fancies. 

Fif Prologue   to  Fifine 

at  the  Fair. 
Pacch.  . .  .Prologue  to  Pacch- 
iarotto. 

Red  Cott Red  Cotton  Night- 
Cap  Country. 

Reph Rephan. 

Respecta Respectability. 

Rev Reverie. 


R.  and  B Ring  and  Book. 

R.  Brown   ..  .Rawdon  Brown. 

Rudel Rudel  to  the  Lady 

of  Tripoli. 

St.  Mart Saint  Martin's  Sum- 
mer. 

St.  Prax The   Bishop  orders 

his   Tomb  at  St. 
Praxed's. 

Serenade Serenade     at      the 

Villa. 

Shah  A Shah  Abbas. 

Sib.  Sehaf .  . . .  Sibrandus  Schaf na- 
burgensis. 

Sludge Mr.  Sludge  the  Me- 
dium, 

Solil Soliloquy     of     the 

Spanish    Cloister. 

Sol.  and  B.. .  .Solomon  and  Bal- 
kis. 

Song Song :    "  Nay  but 

you  who  do  not 
love  her." 

Sor Sordello. 

Soul's  Tr Soul's  Tragedy. 

Speeul Speculative. 

Stat,  and  B..  .The  Statue  and  the 
Bust. 

Straf Strafford. 

Sum.  Bon Summum  Bonum. 

Tliro' Met.  ...Through    the    Me- 

tidja. 

Time's  R Time's  Revenges. 

Toccata A   Toccata  of  Ga- 

luppi's. 
Touch Touch  him  ne'er  so 

Hghtly. 

Trans Transcendentalism. 

Two  Cam The  Two  Camels. 

Two  m  C Two  in    the   Cam- 

pagna. 
Two  Poets  . .  .Two  Poets  of  Croi- 

sic. 

Up  —  Down  .  Up  at  a  Villa  — 
Down  in  the  City. 

Wanting Wantins:  is  Wliat  ? 

Wliite  W White   AVitchcraft. 

Why Why  I  am  a  Lib- 
eral. 

Woman's A    Woman's    Last 

Word. 

Women  andR. Women  and  Roses. 

Worst The  Worst  of  it. 

Youth  and  A. Youth  and  Art. 


THE  BROWNING  PHRASE  BOOK 


Abandon.     What  is  it  you  wish  ?     That  I  should  lay  aside  my 

heart's  pursuit,  Abaudon  the   sole  ends   for  which  I  live, 

Reject  God's  great  commission,  and  so  die  !     Para.  1:30. 

C.  13. 
Abatement.     Heaven's   gift  takes   earth's  abatement  !      One 

Word  4  :  126.     C.  362. 
Abbas,  Shah.     Reigned  great  Shah  Abbas  :  he  too  lived  and 

died.     Shah  A.Q:  243.     C.  931. 
Abbey-stones.     They  scratch  his  name  on  the  Abbey-stones. 

Last  Ride  2  :  280.     C.  268. 
Abdicating,     'tis  by  abdicating,   Incontestably  he  proves  he 

could  have  kept  the  crown  discarded.   Pietro  6  :  173.    C.  902. 
Abhorrence.    Gr-r-r  —  there  go,  my  heart's  abhorrence  !    Solil. 

2  :  12.     C.  167. 
Abjured.     I  had  abjured  the  hope  of  love,  And  being  loved. 

In  aB.4^:  139.     C.  367. 
Abnegation.     With  abnegation  wise  as  rare.     Red  Cott.  5  :  18. 

C.  743. 
Above.      Beneath   Soon  sates  the   looker — look  Above,  and 

Death  Tempts  ere  a  tithe  of  Life  be  tasted.     Sor.  1 :  313. 

C.  122. 
Absent,     deep  in  thought  and  absent  much  of  mind.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  147.     C.  473. 

Absorbed,    he  sat  absorbed  in  one  profound  Excogitation.    Two 

Poets  6  :  84.      C.  862. 
Absurd.     Ossa   piled    Topping   Olympus  —  tlie  absurd   wliich 

crowns  The  extravagant.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  331.     C.  966. 
Abuses,     certain,  who  itched  to  be  carting  Abuses  away  clean 

and  thorough.     Pacch.  5  :  323.     C.  804. 
Accept,     what 's   my  teaching  but  —  accept   the   old.  Contest 

the  strange  !     Ari.  A.  5: 159.      C.  652. 
Accident.     God   sends  the  accident  express.     In  a  B.  4:144. 

C.  369. 

Accomplished,     it  must  oft   fall  out   That  one  whose   labor 
perfects  any  work.  Shall  rise  from  it  with  eye  so  worn  that 


2  ACCUSED  — ADDER 

he  Of  all  men  least  can  measure  the  extent  Of  what  he  has 
aceoiuplished.     Para.  1:GS.     C.  28. 

Accused.  The  accused  .  .  .  Xow  is  grown  judge  himself,  ter- 
rifies .  .  .  the  other  culprit  called  a  judge.  R.  and  B.  3  :  24. 
C.  424. 

Ache.     But  hearts,  after  leaps,  ache.    Likeness  4l:221.     C.  397. 

Aching.  Out  of  that  aching  brain,  a  very  stone.  Song  must 
be  struck.     Sor.  1:236.     C.  92. 

Achievement.  Thus  achievement  lacks  a  gracious  somewhat. 
One  iro/y/4:12G.      C.  362. 

Acknowledgment.     Back,    with   the   quiet  face  of  yore.  So 
hungry  for  acknowledgment  Like  mine  !      Waring  2  :  271. 
C.  265. 
heart  refrains  From  loving's  acknowledgment.     "Whole  losses 
outweigh  half-gains.     /2ey.  6:436  ;  7  :  105.     C.  1005. 

Acoustics.  Man  makes  acoustics  deal  with  the  sea's  wrath, 
Explains  the  choppy  cheek  by  chymic  law.  R.  and  B.  3  :  387. 
C.  566. 

Acquetta.  The  silent  acquetta,  stilling  at  command  —  A  drop 
a  day  i'  the  wine  or  soup,  the  dose,  —  R.  and  B.  3 :  130. 
C.  466. 

Acquittal.  Pronounces  for  acquittal.  How  it  trips  Silverly 
o'er  the  tongue  !     R.  and  B.  3  :400.     C.  571. 

Act.     What  act  proved  all  its  thought  had  been  ?    Last  Ride 
2  :  280.     C.  268. 
Inalienable,  the  arch-prerogative,  Which  turns  thought,  act  — 

conceives,  expresses  too  !     R.  and  B.  3  :17.     C.  421. 
This  man's  act,  changeable  because  alive!     R.  and  B.  3:31. 

C.  426. 
it  is  the  seed  of  act,  God  holds  appraising  in  His  hollow  palm, 

Not  act  grown  great.     R.  and  B.  3  :  362.    C.  556. 
Along  with  every  act  —  and  speech  is  act  —  There  go,  a  multi- 
tude impalpable  To  ordinary  human  faculty,  The  thoughts 
which  give  the  act  significance.     Red  Colt.  5  :  75.     C.  765. 
I  act  for,  talk  for,  live  for  this  world  now,  .  .  .  No  prejudice 
to  what  next  world  may  prove.     Bishop  B.  4  :  109.     C.  356. 
Act,  as  if  all  creation  hung  attent  On  the  acting  of  such  fac- 
ulty as  thine.     Prince  H.  4  :  353.     C.  690. 

Acts.  Acts  strangelier  —  haply  wiselier  than  we  know  — 
Stronglier,  for  certain.     Geo.  B.  D.  6  :  325.     C.  946. 

Action.  Action  now  shrouds,  nor  shows  the  informing  thought. 
R.  and  B.  3  :  31.     C.  426. 

Actors',  first  of  —  doers'  kind  ?  Actors',  that  work  in  ear- 
nest sportively.  Paid  by  a  sourish  smile.  Geo.  B.  D.6: 320. 
C.  962. 

Acuter.  in  after  time.  If  some  acuter  wit,  fresh  probing, 
sound  This  multifarious  mass.     it.  and  B.  3  :  362.     C.  556. 

Adder.  I  still  came  at  every  turn  On  the  soft  sly  adder,  end- 
long 'ueath  my  tread.     R.  and  B.  3  :  203.     C.  495. 


ADDITION  — AGE  3 

Addition,     not  all  addition  perfects  aye  !      Pretty   W.  2  :  78. 

C.  191. 
Admiration.     True  admiration  blinds  not.    Para.  1:80.   C.  32. 

Naught  blinds  you  less  than   admiration,   friend  !     Para. 

1:80.     C.  32. 
I  do  not  dislike  finding  somebody  vary  a  little  this  general 

gape  of  admiration.     Soid's  Tr.  2  :  348.     C.  294. 
Advantages.     Beauty,    strength,  intellect  —  men    often    have 

none  of  these,  and  yet  conceive  pi'etty  accurately  what  kind 

of  advantages  they  would  bestow  on  the  possessor.     Soul's 

Tr.  2  :  357.     C.  297. 
Adversaries,     the  bitterest  adversaries  get  to  discover  certain 

points   of  similarity  between  each  other,  common  sympa- 
thies.    SouVs  Tr.  2  :  355.     C.  297. 
Advice.     —  has  his  apt  advice  On  house-economy,  expenditure. 

7^.anrf£.  3:444.     C.  589. 
Advocate,     tlie  advocate,    the  ready  at  a  pinch  !     R.  and  B. 

3:7.     C.  417. 
A  poor  rash  advocate  I  prove  myself.     You  might  be  angry 

with  good  cause.     R.  and  B.  3  :"233.     C.  507. 
the  natural  gird  At  advocate  with  case  that  proves  itself.     R. 

and  B.  3: 'iGS.     C.  597. 
.Sitna.     there  needed  ^tna  vomit  flame   Ere  run  the  crystal 

into  dewdrops  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  125.     C.  404. 
Affection.     As  well  affirm  that  your  eye  is  no  longer  in  your 

body,  because  its  earliest  favorite,  whatever  it  may  have  first 

loved  to  look  on,  is  dead  and  done  with —  as  that  any  affection 

is  lost  to  the  soul  when  its  first  object,  whatever  happened 

first  to  satisfy  it,  is  superseded  in  due  course.    Pippa  1 :  341. 

C.  134. 
Afford.     Of  an  old  family  .  .  .  old  To  that  degree  they  could 

afford  be  poor.     R.  and  B.  3  :  114.     C.  459. 
Afraid.     —  So,  /  was  afraid  !     Instans  2  :  242.      C.  255. 
After-reasons.     For  after-reasons,  furnished  abundantly.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  182.     C.  487. 
Agamemnon.      Did    earlier   Agamemnons   lack   their   bard  ? 

But  later  bards  lacked  Agamemnon  too  !     Two  Poets  6  :  111. 

C.  872. 
Age.     I  look  With  hope  to  age  at  last,  which  quenching  much. 

May  let  me  concentrate  what  sparks  it  spares.     Pau.  1:15. 

C.8. 
In  age  we  '11  sigh  O'er  the  wild  reckless  wicked  days  flown 

over.     Pippa  l-.^Zo.     C.  132. 
The  age  of  crafty  men  Is  loatlisome.     King  C.  1 :  397.    C.  156. 
But  one's  old  age,  when  graces  drop  away  And  leave  guile 

the  pure  staple  of  our  lives.     King  C.  1:397.     C.  156. 
with  age  comes  caution  :  And  stinging  pleasures  please  less 

and  sting  more.     Druses  2  :  122.     C.  207. 


4  AGE  — AGONY 

Age.     So,  at  the  last  shall  come  old  age,  Decrepit  as  befits  that 

stage.     Flight  2  :  30-4.     C.  277. 
Age  is  not  all  made  of  stark  sloth  and  arrant  ease.     Flight 

2  :  308.     C.  278. 
What 's   a   man's   age  ?     He   must   hurry   more,  that 's   all  ; 

Cram  in  a  day,  what  his  youth  took  a  year  to  hold.     Flight 

2  :  309.     C.  278. 
the  wormy  age  which  eats  even  oak,  —  Nay,  the  stanch   steel 

or  trusty  cord.     K.  and  B.  3  :  130.     C.  466. 
—  age  never  slips    The  chance  of  shoving  youth  to  face  death 

first !     R.  and  B.  3  :  413.     C.  576. 
Therefore  I  summon  age    To  grant  youth's    heritage.     Ben 

Ezra  4  :  187.     C.  384. 
the   wrinkled   brow,  bald   pate.  And   rheumy   eyes   of   Age, 

peak'd  chin  and  parchment  chap,  Were  signs  of  day-work 

done,  and  wage-time  near.     Fifine  4:426.     C.  726. 
Age  reduced  to  simple  greed  and  guile,  Worn  apathetic  else 

as  some  smooth  slab.     Fijine  4  :  426.     C.  726. 
Age  quarrels  because  Spring  puts  forth  a  leaf  While  Winter 

has  a  mind  that  boughs  stay  bare.    Red  Cott.  5  :  54.    C.  756. 
age  descries  Propriety  in  preaching  life  to  death.     Red   Cott. 

5:54.     C.  756. 
since  extreme  old  age  Wakes  pity,  woman's  wrong  wins  cham- 
pionship.    Ari.  A.b: 111.     C.  633. 
the  old  man,  —  at  his  age.  Living  is  dreaming,  and  strange 

guests  haunt  door.     Ari.  A.  5  :159.     C.  652. 
What  Youth  deemed  crvstal.  Age  finds  out  was  dew  Morn  set 

a-sparkle.     Joch.  6  :  219.     C.  921. 
our  age  stores  wealth  ye  seek  in  vain  While  busy  youth  culls 

just  what  we  discuss  At  leisure.     Joch.  6  :  227.     C.  925. 
Age  —  impotence,  churlishness,  rancor.     Apol.  and  F.  6  :  287. 

C.  949. 
Age  ?     ^Yhy,  fear  ends  there  :   the  contest  concluded,  Man 

did  live  his  life,  did  escape  from  the  fray.     Ajjol.  and   F. 

6  :  292.     C.  951. 
vour  worn,  your  weak,  Brow-furrowed  old  age.    Reph.  6  :  431 ; 

7:95.     C.  1004. 
Age's.     Had  Age's  hard  cold  knowledge  only  spared  That  igno- 
rance of  Youth  !     Joch.  6  :  219.     C.  921. 
Aggrandizement.     We  want  no  name  and  fame  —  having  our 

own  :  No  wordly  aggrandizement  —  such  we  fly  :     R.  and 

B.  3  :  75.     C.  444. 

Agnolo.      Agnolo  —  Thine  were  alike  the  head  and  hand,  by 
fate  Doubly  endowed  !     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  329.     C.  965. 

Agony.     Where  the  hot  vapor  of  an  agony.  Struck  into  drops 
on  the  cold  wall,  runs  down.     R.  and  B.  3  :  29.     C.  426. 
Did  you  but  know,  as  I,  .  .  .  what  the  agony  Of  Art  is  ere 
Art  satisfy  herself  lu  imitating  Nature.     Fr.  Fu.  6:330. 

C.  965. 


AGUE'S  — ALL  5 

Agur's.     Well,  I  have  modelled  me  by  Agur's  wish.    R.  and  B. 

3  :  318.     C.  540. 
Ahasuerus.    Like  to  Ahasuerus,  that  shrewd  prince.    R.  and  B. 

3  :  356.     C.  554. 
Ahead,     ever  ahead  i'  the  march,  Quick  at  the   by-road  and 

the  cut-across.     R.  arid  B.  3  :  80.     C.  445.  ~^olA»- 
Aid.     She  sought  for  aid  ;  and  if  she  made  mistake  I'  the  man 
could  aid  most,  why —  so  mortals  do.      R.  and  B.  3:341. 
C. 548. 
Pisan  assistance,  aid  that  comes  too  late.  Saves  a  man  dead  as 
nail  in  post  of  door.     R.  and  B.  3  :  4G4.     C.  596. 
Aim.     one   tyrant   ail-Absorbing  aim   tills   up  the  interspace. 
Para.  1:49.     C.  21. 
high-dowered  but  limited  and  vexed  By  a  divided  and  delu- 
sive aim.     Para.  1:119.     C.  47. 
One  great  aim,  like  a  guiding-star,  above.     Colombe  2  :  215. 

C.  245. 
The  aim,  if  reached  or  not,  makes  great  the  life  :  Try  to  be 
Shakespeare,   leave   the  rest  to  fate  !      Bishop  B.  4  :  103. 
C.  353. 
Wiselier,  he  suffered  not  a  twofold  aim  Retard  his  pace,  con- 
fuse his  sight.     ArLA.  5  :  105.     C.  630. 
Aims.     O  God,  where  do  they  tend  —  tliese  struggling  aims  ? 
Pau.     1:20.     C.  9. 
O  God,  where  does  this  tend  — ■  these  struggling  aims  ?  *    Pau. 
1:20.* 
Air.     Air,  air,  fresh  life-blood,  thin  and  searching  air.  The  clear, 
dear  breath  of  God  that  loveth  us.     Pau.  1:19.     C.  9. 
The  townsmen  walked  by  twos  and  threes,  and  talked.  Drink- 
ing the  blackness  in  default  of  air.    R.  and  B.  3  :  12.    C.  419. 
her  thin  arms  and  sunk  eyes  That  want  fresh  air  outside  the 
convent-wall.     R.  and  B.  3  :  101.     C.  454. 
Aldobrandini.     What  made  Aldobrandiui,  hound-like  stanch. 

Cenciaja  5  :  374.     C.  823. 
Alert,     alive  And  alert,   calm,   resolute   and   formidable.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  96.     C.  452. 
Alienate.     Never  dare  alienate  God's  gift  you  hold  Simjilv  in 

trust  for  Him  !     Dan.  Bar.  6  :  307.     C.  957. 
Alive.     Also  he  is  alive  and  like  to  be  :  Had   he  considerately 
died,  —  aha  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  35.     C.  428. 
Had  I   been   dead  !     How  I'ight  to  be  alive  !  Last  night  I 
almost  prayed  for  leave  to  die.    R.  and  B.  3  :  265.     C.  519. 
no  end  of  brutes  Cut  up  alive  to  guess  what  suits   My  case 
and   saves   my  toe   from    shoots.     Arcades  6:406;  7:43. 
C.  993. 
Alkestis.     That    strangest,    saddest,    sweetest    song    of    his, 

Alkestis.     Balau.  4  :  268.     C.  604. 
All.     Never  may  some  soul  see  All  —  The  Great  Before  and 
After,  and  the  Small  Now.     Sor.  1:320.     C.  125. 


6  ALL  — AMENDS 

All.     I  would  that  you  were  all  to  me,  You  that  are  just  so 

much,  no  more.     Two  in  C.  2  :  72.     C.  189. 
All-abject.      All-abject  's   but   half   truth;    Add  to  all-abject 

knave  as  perfect  fool  !     Inn  A.  o:  279.     C.  788. 
All-fours.     Fairly  on  all-fours.     Cenciaja  5  :  372.     C.  822. 
If  vou  cannot  tramp  and  trudge  like  a  man,  try  all-fours  like 

a"^  dog  !      Hal.  and  Hob  6  :  129.     C.  880. 
All-mercy.     Since  God's  All-mercy  mates  All-potency  ?     Mih- 

rab  6 : 253.     C.  935. 
Alms.     So  that  the  unreflecting  rather  taxed  Profusion  than 

penuriousness  in  alms.     Red  Cott.  5  :  18.     C.  743. 
Alone.     We  have  to  live  alone  to  set  forth  well  God's  praise. 

'T  is   true,   I   sinned   much  as  I  thought.      Para.    1:114. 

C.  45. 
all  the  world  Having  to  fail,  or  your  sagacity.  You  do  not 

wish  to  find  yourself  alone  !     Luria  2  :  376.     C.  305. 
I  will  live  alone,  one  does  so  in  a  crowd,  And  look  into  my 

heart  a  little.     R.  and  B.  3  :  199.     C.  493. 
He  was  alone:  silence  and  solitude  Befit  the  votary  of   the 

Muse.     Two  Poets  6  :  84.     C.  862. 
Alp.     How   sharp   the   silver   spear-heads   charge   When   Alp 

meets  heaven  in  snow  !     By  Fire.2 :  60.     C.  185. 
Alpine-rose.     I  knew  an  Alpine-rose  which  all  beside  named 

Edelweiss.     La  S.  6  :  58.     C.  851. 
Alter,     to  alter  Our  life,  there  is  so  much  to  alter  !     King  V. 

1:372.     C.  146. 
Had  I  God's  leave,  how  I  would  alter  things  !      R.  and  B. 

3  :  320.     C.  540. 
Alternating,     alternating  worry  with  quiet  qualms.  Bravado 

with  submissiveness.     R.  and  B.  3  :34.     C.  428. 
Amaranths.     Plucker  of  amaranths  grown  beneath  God's  eye 

In   gracious   twilights   where  his   chosen   lie.    Sor.  1:201. 

C.  78. 
Amaze.     Mute  in  the  midst,  the  whole  man  one  amaze.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  35.     C.  428. 
Amber,     as  amber  prisons  round  A  spider  in  the  hollow  heart 

his  house  !     Inn  A.  o  :  293.     C.  793. 
Ambiguously.     AVhy  play   instead  into  the  devil's  hands  By 

dealing  so  ambiguously.      R.  and  B.  3  :  230.     C.  506. 
Ambition.     Virtue  on   virtue   still   have   fallen  away  Before 

ambition  with  unvarying  fate.     Luria2:3Go.     C.  300. 
What 's  this  long    Lance-like   ambition  ?      Forge  a  pruning- 

hook.     R.  and  B.  3  :437.     C.  586. 
Ambitions.     There    are   fiie-flames    noondays    kindle,    .    .    . 

"Wherelty  swollen  ambitions  dwindle.     Crist.  2  :  18.     C.  169. 
Ambitious.     How  the  ambitious  do  so  harden  heart  As  lightly 

hold  by  these  home-sanctitudes.    R.  and  B.  3  :  318.    C.  54CJ. 
Amends.     Let  each  side  own  its  fault  and  make  amends  !     R. 

and  B.  3  :  59.     C.  437. 


AMENDS  — ANNALS  7 

Amends.     Let   Lim   make  God  amends,  —  none,  none  to  me. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  275.     C.  524. 
Amusement,     this  proves  mere  Stripling's  amnsemeut:  mau- 

hood's  sport  be  grave  !     Two  Poets  (5 :  79.     C.  860. 
Analysis,     show  by  prompt  analysis  Wliich  is  the  metal,  which 

the  make-believe.     Joch.  6  :  227.     C.  925. 

Ancients.     But  all  those  ancients  could  say  anything  !      He 

put  in  just  what  rushed  into  his  head.     R.  and  B.  3  :  355. 

C.  553. 

Angel.     —  My  angel  with  me  too.    Guard.  Ang.  2  :  89.     C.  194:. 

This    beggar    might    be    perhaps   An    angel,   Luther    said. 

Ttoins  2  :  276.     C.  266. 
a   dusk  misfeatured   messenger,  .  .  .  the  angel  of   this  life, 
Wliose  care  is  lest  man  see  too  much  at  once.     R.  and  B. 
3  :  14.     C.  420. 
Oh,  Angel  of  the  East,  one,  one  gold  look  Across  the  waters 
to  this  twilight  nook.     Rudel  4  :  123.     C.  361. 
Angel-guest.     Might  welcome  as  it  were  an  angel-guest  Come 

in  Christ's  name.     R.  and  B.  3  :  10.     C.  418. 
Angels.     'T  is  only  when  they  spring  to  heaven    that   angels 
Reveal  themselves  to  yon.     Para.  1: 106.     C.  42. 
Best  people  are  not  angels  quite.     Pippa  1 :  365.     C.  144. 
The   angels    love  to  do    their   work   betimes,  Stanch    some 
wounds  here  nor  leave  so  much  for  God.     Pc.  and  B.  3  :  68. 
C.  441. 
Quite  angel,  —  and  her  parents  angels  too  Of  an  aged  sort, 

immaculate,  word  and  deed.     R..  and  B.  3  :  141.     C.  470. 
Men  are  not  angels,  neither  are  they  brutes.    Bishop  B.  4  :  111. 
C.  357. 
Angelic.      a  sweet  angelic  slip  of  a  thing.      Fra  Lippo  4  :  82. 

C.  345. 
Angelico.     Titian  's  the  man,  not  Monk  Angelico  Who  traces 

you  some  timid  chalky  ghost,     i?.  anc?  5.  3  :  450.     C.  591. 
Anger.     Anger  he  might  show,  —  who  can  stamp  out  flame  Yet 
spread  no  black  o'  the  brand  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  161.     C.  478. 
Say   this   as   silverly   as   tongue   can   troll  —  The  anger  of 

the  man  may  be  endured.     R.  and  B.  3:477.     C.  601. 
The  thing  I  pity  most  In  men  is  —  action  prompted  by  sur- 
prise Of  anger.     Forgiv.  5  :  365.     C.  819. 
Cease  from  anger  at  the  fates  Which  thwart  themselves  so 
madly.     Chris.  Sm.  6  :318.     C.  961. 
Angry,     all  red  and  angry,  scarce  Able  to  stutter  out  his  wrath 
in  words.     R.  and  B.  3  :  248.     C.  513. 
Angry  !     And  how  coidd  I  be  otherwise  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  429. 

C.  583. 
In  brief  the  man  was  angry  with  himself.  With  her,  with  all 
the  world  and  much  beside.      Red  Cott.  5  :  52.       C.  756. 
Annals,     enrich    Life's    annals    with   example  how   I   played 
Lover,  Bard,  Soldier,  Statist.     Joch.  6  :  213.     C.  919. 


8  ANNIHILATE  — APPLAUSE 

Annihilate.     To  annihilate  —  not  .  .  .  tbeanthor  .  ,  .  But  the 

l)lac'e,  the  memory,  .  .  .  O' the  shame  and  scorn.    R.  and  B. 

3  :  292.     C.  530. 
Antichrist.     Antichrist   surely    comes   and  doomsday 's   near. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  36.     C.  428. 
Anticipate.     I've   travelled   ground,  from   childhood  to   tliis 

hour.  To  have  the  town  anticipate  my  track  ?     R.  and  B. 

3 : 285.     C.  528. 
Anticipation.       Big     with      anticipation  —  well-nigh     fear. 

Chris.  Sm.  6  :  3li3.     C.  959. 
Antimasque.     The  impatient  antimasque  treads  close  on  kibe 

O'   the  very  masque's  self  it  wUl  mock.     R.  and  B.  3  :  398. 

C.  570. 
Antitype.     Type  needs  antitype:  As  night  needs  day,  as  shine 

needs  shape,  so  good  Needs  evil.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  339.     C.  969. 
Ansvcer.     A  speedy  answer  followed;    but,  alas.  One  of  God's 

large  ones.     Sor.  1:22,2.     C.  90. 
Anywhere.     "  Anywhere,  anyhow,  out  of  my  husband's  house 

Is  heaven,"  cried  she,  —  was  therefore  suited  so.   R.  and  B. 

3  :  60.     C.  438. 
Apart.     We  can  stand  apart,  Heart  dispense  with  heart  In  the 

sun,  with  the  flowers  unnipped.     Lovers^  Q.  2  :  31.     C.  173. 
Ape.     the  pertest  little  ape  That  ever  affronted  human  shajie. 

FligTit  2  :  291.     C.  272. 
TUl    he    attained    to  be   an   ape   at    last  Or   last   but   one. 

Prince  H.  4  :  353.      C.  690. 
Apollo.     He  was  a  man  born  with  thv  face  and  throat.  Lyric 

Apollo  !     Gram.  Fun.  2  :  310.     C.  279. 
Sending  his  god-glance  after  his  shjot  shaft,  ApoUos  turned 

Apollo.     R.  and  B.  3  :  50.     C.  434. 
Apophthegm,     some  gentility  of  apophthegm  Still  pregnant  on 

the  philosophic  page.     R.  and  B.  3  :  340.     C.  548. 
Appalled.     Htlier  thou  saidst,  I  stand  appalled  before  Con- 

ce])tion  unattainable  by  me.     Sun  6  :  252.     C.  934. 
Apparition.     A  pleasant  apparition,  such  as  shocks  A  moment, 

tells  a  tale,  then  goes  for  good !     Red  Colt.  5  :  43.      C.  752. 
Appearance.      What   if  all 's   appearance  ?      Is   not   outside 

seeming  Real  as  substance  inside  ?    Flute-M.  6  :424  ;  7:80. 

C.  1001. 
Appetite.     Nature's  prime  impulse,  earthly  appetite.     Ari.  A. 

5  :  133.     C.  641. 
That   I   have   appetite,  digest,  and  thrive  —  that  boon 's  for 

me.     Bean-F.  6  :404;  7:39.     C.  993. 
Appetizing.     God   wills   you    never    pace   your   garden-path. 

One  appetizing  hour  ere  dinner-time.      R.  and  5.3:453. 

C.  592. 
Applause,     estimate  applause   As  just   so  many  asinine  hee- 
haws ?     Two  Poets  6  :  104.     C.  869. 


APPLE-TREE  —  ARRIVE  9 

Apple-tree.     That  apple-tree  with  a  rare  after-birth  Of  peep- 
ing blooms  sprinkled  its  wealth  among  !    Para.  1 :  28.    C.  13. 
Appreciate.     I  mnst  have  a  woman  that  can  sympathize  with, 

and  appreciate  me,  I  told  you.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  353.     C.  29G. 
Apprehend.     Still  —  truth  must  out  —  I  apprehend  the  worst. 

Luria  2  :  398.     C.  313. 
Apprehension,     wiser    ignorance  Restricts   its    apprehension, 

sees  and  knows  No  more  than  brain  accepts  in  faith  of  sight. 

Pillar  6  :  2G9.     C.  941. 
Apprenticeship.     It  may  be  that  by  sad  apprenticeship  I  have 

a  keener  sense.      Inn  ^4.  5  :  275.     C.  786. 
Approve.       A   passion   to   stand   as   your   thoughts   approve. 

/.  Lee  4  :  164.     C.  376. 
April.     In  a  day  he  leaps  complete  with  a  few  strong  April 

stms.     Up  — Down  2:32.     C.  174. 
Aptitude,     aptitude  Angelic,  understanding   swift   and    sure. 

Family  6  :  248.     C.  932. 
Arab,     an  Arab  As  glossy  and  black  as  a  scarab.     Glove  2  :  248. 

C.  256. 
Arcs.     On  the  earth  the  broken  arcs  ;  in  the  heaven,  a  perfect 

round.     Abt  V.  4:-.  1S4:.     C.  383. 
Arch-knave,     arch-knave  as  exquisitest  fool.     Inn  A.  5:  285. 

C.  790. 
Arches,     the  arches  dim,  The  crumbling  columns  grand  against 

the  moon.     Para.  1: 108.     C.  43. 
Archangels.    God  has  his  archangels  and  consorts  with  them  : 

though  He  made  too,  and  intimately  sees  what  is  good  in,  the 

worm.     Sours  Tr.  2  •  356.     C.  297. 
Architect.     And  all   the  sportive  floral   framework   fits   The 

lightsome    purpose    of    the    architect.      Red    Cott.    o :  16. 

C.  742. 
in  that  far  land  we  dream  about.  Where  every  man  is  his  own 

architect.     Red  Cott.  5  :  47.     C.  754. 
Architecture,     architecture  all-appropriate.  And,  therefore,  in 

this  world  impossible.     Red  Cott.  5  :  47.     C.  754. 
Argument,     reserve  Myself  the  juicier  breast  of  argument  — 

Flinging  the  breast-blade.     R.  and  B.  3  :  314.      C.  538. 
Argument's.     Brain  practised  and  tongue  no  less  tutored.  In 

argument's  armor  accoutred.     Pacck.  5  :  324.     C.  804. 
Arms.     Each,   like  a  semicircle  with  stretched  arms.   Joining 

the  other  round  her  preciousness.    R.  and  B.  3  :  73.    C.  443. 
What   if  all   be  error  —  If   the   halo  irised  round   my  head 

were.  Love,  thine  arms  ?     Epil.  Fer.  6  :  283.     C.  947. 
Armed.     Rob    halt  and    lame,  sick   folk  i'  the  temple-porch  ! 

Armed  with   religion,  fortified  by  law.     R.  and  B.  3  :  376. 

C.  561. 
Arrive.     In  some  time,  his  good  time,  I  shall  arrive:  He  guides 

me  and  the  bird.     Para.  1:40.     C.  17. 


10  ART  —  ART'S 

Art.     Works  done  least  rapidly,  Art  most  cherishes.     Old  Pict. 

2  :  40.     C.  177. 
Because,  it  is  tlie  glory  and  good  of  Art,  That  Art  remains 

the   one  way  possible    Of   speaking  truth,  to  mouths  like 

mine  at  least.     R.  and  B.  3  :477.     C.  601. 
But  Art,  —  wherein  man  nowise  speaks  to  men,  Only  to  man- 
kind, —  Art  may  tell  a  truth  Obliquely.      R.  and  B.  3  :  477. 

C.  601. 
Art  was  given   for  that;  God  uses  us  to  help  each  other  so. 

Lending  our  minds  out.     Fra  Lippo  4  :  80.     C.  345. 
Tliat  Art,  —  wliich  I  may  style  the  love  of  loving,  rage  Of 

knowing,    seeing,   feeling    the    absolute    truth   of   things. 

iv/rne  4: 401.     C.  712. 
so    with  what  emulates   The    same,  expresses    hates,  loves, 

fears,  and  hopes  in  Art.     Fiji7ie  4  :  425.     C.  725. 
Art  In  the  decrepitude  of  Decadence.   Red  Cott.  5  :  28.    C.  747. 
gold  and  silver  changed  By  Art  to  forms  where  wealth  forgot 

itself.     Red  Cott.  5  :  43.     C.  752. 
Art  renewed  ?  Ay,  in  some  closet  where  strength  shuts  out 

—  first   The     friendly   faces,  .  .  .  Next,    the    unfriendly  : 

^n.^.  5:120.     C.  636. 
Art  could  correct  to  pattern  What  Nature  had  slurred —  the 

slattern  !     Pacch.  5  :  318.     C.  802. 
To  learn  by  what  procedure,  in  the  schools  Of  Art,  a  merest 

man  in  outward  shape  May  learn  to   be  Correggio  !     Fr. 

Fu.  6  :  332.     C.  966. 
Art   was   just   A    safety-screen  —  (Art,     which    Correggio's 

tongue  Calls  "  Virtue  ")  —  for  a   skulking  vice.      Fr.  Fu. 

6  :  332.     C.  960. 
in  Art  the  soul  uplifts  Man's  best  of  thanks  !    Fr.  Fu.  6  :  333. 

C.  966. 
Vainly  his  Art,  reflected,  smiled  in  small  On  Art's  one  facet 

of  her  ampler  ball.     Bea.  Sig.  6  :  413  ;  7: 59.     C.  996. 
Art  that  breaks  bounds,  gets  soaring-room.     Specul.  6  :  394  ; 

7:13.     C.  988. 
It  is  all  triumphant  art,  but  art  in  obedience  to  laws.      Aht  V. 

4  :  183.     C.  383. 
For  art   supplants,  gives  mainly  worth  To  nature  ;  't  is  man 

stamps  the  earth.     Eas.-Day  4  :  50.     C.  333. 
earth's  nature  sublimed  by  Man's  art  —  Apol.  and  F.  6  :  291. 

C.  950. 
Art's.     Pure  Art's  birth  is  still  the  republic's.      Old  Pict.  2  :  44. 

C.  178. 
Art's  smooth  for  Nature's  rough,  new  chip  from  the  old  block  ! 

Fifne  4  :  438.     C.  733. 
Always  Art's  seigneur,  not  Art's  serving-man.   Red  Cott.  5  :48. 

C.  754. 
Art's  response  To  earth's  despair.    Chris.  Sm.  6  :  313.    C.  959. 


ART'S  — ATTACK  11 

Art's.     Outside  Art's   pale  —  a}',    grubbcrl,    wliere    pine-trees 

S^row,  For  pignuts  only.     Fr.  Fa.  G  :  332.     C.  9GG. 
What 's  known  once  is  known  ever:  Arts  arrange,  Dissociaie, 

re-distril)ute.     Chas.  A.  6  :358.     C.  97G. 
Artifice.     Here  and   there  a  touch   Taught  me,  betimes,  the 

artifice  of  things —  That  all  about,  external  to  myself.  Was 

meant  to  be  suspected.     Bean  St.  C  :  275.     C.  943. 
Artist.     An  artist  whose  religion  is  his  art.     Bishop  B.  4  :  113. 

C.  357. 
poor  artist  vainly  bruising  brush  On  palette.    Red  Cott.  5  :  33. 

C.  749. 
Artistry.     Artistry  being  battle  with  the  age  It  lives  in  !     Red 

Cott.  5  :  48.     C.  754. 
Ashes.     Ashes  in  death's   stern  alembic,  loosed   elixir   in   its 

place  !    La  S.  G  :  G7.     C.  855. 
Asleep,     this  old  world  for  want  of  strife  Sound  asleep.      War- 
ing 2 : 274.     C.  2GG. 
Asolo.     a  heathy  brown  and  nameless  hill  By  sparkling  Asolo. 

.Sor.  1:326.     C.  127. 
Asp.     No  asp  Is  diapered  more  delicate  round  throat  Than  this 

below  the  handle  !     Forgiv.  5  :  365.     C.  819. 
Aspire,     aspire  to  live  ...  In  harmony  with  truth,  ourselves 

being  true  !     InaB.4::  137.     C.  366. 
Aspire,   break  bounds  !     I  say,    Endeavor  to  be   good,    and 

better  still,  and  best  !     Red  Cott.  5  :  92.     C.  771. 
Not  reach  —  aspire  yet  never  attain  To  the  object  aimed  at  ! 

Reph.  6  :  434  ;  7: 100.     C.  1004. 
Aspired.     What  I  aspired  to  be.  And  was  not,  comforts  me: 

A  brute  I  miglit  have  been,  but  would  not  sink  i'  the  scale. 

Ben  Ezra  4  :  186.     C.  384. 
Astraea.     Astrjea  's  gone  indeed,  let  hope  go  too  !     R.  and  B. 

3  :  66.     C.  440. 
Astray.     How,  unless  hell  broke  loose  to  cause  the  step.  How 

could  a  married  lady  go  astray  ?   R.  and  B.  3  :  125.    C.  464. 
Ass.     Even  the  poor  ass.  unpanniered  and  elate  Stands,  perks 

an  ear  up,  he  a  model  too.     R.  and  B.  3  :  321.     C.  541. 
Assimilates,     since  all  love  assimilates  the  soul  To  what  it 

loves.     Para.  1  :  80.     C.  32. 
Assisi.     I  know  Assisi;  this  is  holy  ground.      R.  and  B.  3  :  216. 

C.  500. 
Assurance,     shake  This  torpor  of  assurance  from  our  creed, 

Reintroduce  the  doubt  discarded.    R.  and  B.  3  :  397.    C.  570. 
Atone.     So,  let  death  atone!     So  ends  mistake,  so  end  mis- 
takers! —  end  Pei'haps  to  recommence.     R.  and  B.  ^-.AASi. 

C.  590. 
Attack,     enough  to  bear  the  stress  Of  battle  in  the  field,  with- 
out, when  free  from  outside  foes,  inviting   friends'   attack. 

Tioo  Poets  6  :  107.     C.  871. 


12  ATTAINED  —  AWKWARD 

Attained.     I  liave  attained,  and   now  I  may  depart.      Para. 

1:G1.     C.  25. 
Attend.     All  here  ?     Attend,  perpend!     /2ep^.  6  :431;  7:95. 

C.  1004. 
Audience,     the  seeming-solitary  man,  Speaking  for  God,  may 

have  an  audience  too.     li.  and  B.  3  :  25.     C.  424. 
fired  the  audience   to  a   frenzy-fit    Of   symijathetic  rapture. 

Forgiv.  5  :  361.     C.  818, 
August's.     August's  hair  afloat   in   filmy  fire,    She    fell,  .   .  . 

Swooned  there  and  so  singed  out  the  strength  of  things. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  31.     C.  426. 
Aureoles,     your  lambent  aureoles  lost  may  leave  You  marked 

yet,  dear  beyond  all  diadems  !     Red  Cott.  5  :41.     C.  752. 
Austere.     And  oh  so  lean,  so  sour-faced  and  austere  !     R.  and 

B.  3  :  246.     C.  512. 

Authentic.  It  was  authentic  to  the  experienced  ear  O'  the 
good  and  faithful  servant.     R.  and  B.  3  :  380.     C.  563. 

Authoritative,  edge  in  an  authoritative  word  Between  this 
rabble's-brabble   of    dolts   and  fools.      R.  and  B.  3  :  106. 

C.  456. 

Authority,  they  dismissed  The  hysteric  querulous  rebel,  and 
confirmed  Authority.     R.  and  B.  3  :  183.     C.  487. 

Authorization.  No  more,  .  .  .  Authorization  by  antiquity, 
For  what  offends  our  judgment!     Ari.  A.  B  :  167.     C.  655. 

Authorship.  Authorshiji  has  the  alteration-itch!  Inn  A. 
5:312.     C.  800. 

Autumn.     Autumn  has  come  like  sjjring  returned  to  us,  Won 
from  her  girlishness.     Pau.  1:6.     C.  4. 
Nay,  autumn  wins  you  best  by  this  its  mute  Appeal  to  sym- 
pathy for  its  decay.     Para.  1:28.     C.  12. 
When  Autumn  blusters  and  the  orchard  rocks.     R.  and  B. 
3  :  335.     C.  546. 

Autumn-finish,  healthy  autumn-finish  of  ploughed  glebe.  R. 
and  B.  3  :  377.     C.  562. 

Avenge.  When  you  avenge  your  honor  .  .  .  fray  the  face, 
Not  just  take  life  and  end,  in  clownish  guise.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  33.     C.  427. 

Await.     AVhile  I  Await,  in  fitting  silence,  the  event.      Artemis 

4  :  63.     C.  338. 

A'wakened.     The  whole  earth  was  awakened,  hell  loosed  with 

her  crews;  And  the  stars  of  night  beat  with  emotion.     Saul 

2  :  58.     C.  184. 
Away.     And  the  little  less,  and  what  worlds  away!      By  Fire 

2  :  65.     C.  187. 
Awe.     I  learn   from  Europe:  all  who  seek  Man's  good  must 

awe  man.     Druses  2  :  127.     C.  209. 
Aw^kward.     A  stammering  awkward  man  that  scarce   dared 

raise    His  eye  before  the  magisterial  gaze.      Sor.  1 :  270. 

C.  105. 


BABE  —  BARBERRY  13 


Babe,     her  babe  — that  flexure  of   soft   limbs,  That  budding 

face  imbued  with  dewy  sleep.      R.  and  B.  3  :321.     C.  541. 
the  moment  I  should  lift  Like  Simeon,  in  my  arms,  a  babe, 

God's  gift !     Tivo  Poets  6  :  87.     C.  8G3. 
Baby.     Crawled  all-fours,  with   his  baby  pick-a-back,  Sat   at 

serene  cats'-cradle  with  his  child.  R.  and  B.  3  :  38.  C.  429. 
Babylon,  guilty  glorious  Babylon.  Go?2dola  2  :  268,  C.  264. 
Bach.     Give    me  some  great   glad  "subject,"  glorious   Bach, 

Where   cannon-roar   uot   orgau-peal  we   lack  !      Chas.  A. 

6:364.     C.  978. 
Back,     thou  must  come  Back  to  the  heart's  place  here  I  keep 

for  thee  !     Amj  Wife  2  :  70.     C.  188. 
Oh,   could   I  have   him  back   once    more.      Waring   2 :  271. 

C.  265. 
Backbone,     as  if  his  backbone  were  uot  joiuted.    Flight  2  :  292. 

C.  272. 
Bad.     The  good,  tried  once,  were  bad,  retired.    Eas.-Day  4  :  51. 

C.  333. 
Baffled,     barred,  Baffled,  what  good  began  Ends  evil  on  every 

side.     /^eu.  6:436;  7:106.     C.  1005. 
baffled,  get  up  and  begin  again,  —  So  the  chase  takes  up  one's 

life,  that 's  all.     Life  in  L.  2  :  81.     C.  192. 
Baited.     Am  I  the  baited  animal  that  must  turn  And  fight  his 

baiters  to  deserve  their  praise  ?     Luria  2  :  384.     C.  308. 
Balance.     No     doubt,   there 's   something   strikes   a    balance. 

^l/?f/rea4:88.     C.  348. 
Balanced.     So  nicely  balanced  are  the  adverse  strengths.  And 

victory  entails  reverse  next  time.  Red  Cott.  5  :  27.  C.  746. 
Balaustion.     Balaustion  !     Strangers,   greet    the    lyric    girl  ! 

Balau.  4  :  267.     C.  604. 
Balm.     Whence   has   the   man   the  balm  that   brightens  all  ? 

Karshisk  4  :  66.     C.  339. 
Bandied.     Bandied  as  balls  are  in  a  tennis-court,  And  so  might 

stand,  unless   some  heart  broke   first.      R.  and  B.   3  :  50. 

C.  434. 
Banished.     A   banished  prince,  now,  will  exude  a  juice  And 

salamander-like   support   the   flame,      it.   and   B.    3 :  155. 

C.  476. 
Banquets,     grandees  who  give  banquets  worthy  Jove,  Spend- 
ing  gold   as   if   Plutus   paid  a  whim.     R.   and   B.  3:43. 

C.  431. 
Baracan.     coarse  cloak  of  baracan  (So  they  style  here  the  garb 

of  goat's-hair  cloth).     R.  and  B.  3  :  462.     C.  595. 
Barberry.     And  one  beneficent  rich  bai-berry  Jewelled  all  over 

with  fruit-pendants  red.     Gei:  de  L.  Q:  349.     C.  973= 


14  BARGAIN  — BEAUTIFUL 

Bargain.      As  brisk  a  part  i'  the  barfjain,  as  yon  lamb,  Brought 
forth  from  basket  and  set  out  for  sale.     R.  and  B.  3:78. 
C.  445. 
The  way  of  the  world,  the  daily  bargam  struck  In  the  first 

market !     R.  and  B.  3  :  118.     C.  4G1. 
Bargain    struck,   They  straight   grew  bilious,    wished    their 

money  back.     R.  and  B.  3  :  153.     C.  475. 
Essence  of  this  same  bargain,  blank  and  bare.  Being  the  ex- 
change of   quality  for  wealth,     /i.  a/uZ  5.  3  :  154.     C.  475. 

Bat.     The  sorriest  bat  which  cowers  throughout  noontide  .  .  . 
has  one  time  When  moon  and  stars  are  blinded,  and  the 
prime  Of  earth  is  his  to  claim,  nor  find  a  peer.     Sor.  1 :  221. 
C.  85. 

Bath,     might  have  been  a  bath  For  the   fiend's  glowing  hoof. 
Childe  R.  2 :  333.     C.  288. 

Battled.     Was  it  for  mere  fool's-play,  make-believe  and  mum- 
ming, So  we  battled  it  like  men.    Epil.  Fer.  G  :  283.    C.  910. 

Beach,     beach,   mere   razor-edge  'twixt  earth   and  sea.     Red 
Cott.  5  : 5.     C.  738. 

Beaconing,     amid  the  glare  Beaconing  to  the  breaker,  death 
and  hell.     R.  and  B.  3  :  27.     C.  425. 

Bear.     And,  purblind,  dreads  a  bear  in  every  bush  !     R.  and  B. 

3  :  334.     C.  545. 

Ye  call  it  Doh,  "  The  Bear  :  "  I  trow,  a  wiser  name  than  that 

Were  Aish  —  "  The  Bier."     Joch.  6  :  215.     C.  920. 
I  bear  this  —  not  that  there 's   so   much  to  bear.      King  V. 

1:372.     C.  14G. 
The  petty  nothings  we  bear  privately  But  break  down  under 

when  fools  flock  to  jeer.     R.  and  B.  3  :  120.     C.  4G2. 
If   I   sinned  so,  —  never   obey   voice   more  O'  the  Just   and 

Terrible,  who  bids  us  —  "  Bear  ! "    R.  and  B.  3  :  273.    C.  523. 
you  must  bear.  Abide  and  grow  fit  for  a  better  day.      Worst 

4  :  172.     C.  379. 

Bears,     bears  with  what 's  past  cure.  And  puts  so  good  a  face 

on  't.     SouVs  Tr.  2  :  339.     C.  290. 
Beard.     That  father's  beard  was  long  and  white,  With  love  and 

truth  his  brow  seemed  bright.     The  Confess.  2  :  17.    C.  1G9. 
Beard  whitening  under  like  a  vinous  foam.     Ari.  A.  5:113. 

C.  634. 
Beast.    Still,  beast  irks  beast  on  occasion.    Hal.  and  Hob  6  :  129. 

C.  879. 
Beasts.     Who  lives  With  beasts  assumes  beast-nature,  look  and 

voice.  And,  much  more,  thought,  for  beasts  think.     Inn  A, 

5  :  283.     C.  789. 

Beautiful.     And  day  by  day  more  beautiful  he  grew.     Protus 
2  :  320.     C.  283. 
The  strange  tall  pale  beautiful  creature  grown  Lily-like  out  o' 
the  cleft  i'  the  sun-smit  rock.     R.  and  B.3: 113.     C.  459. 


BEAUTIFUL  — BEAUTY'S  15 

Beautiful.    Oh,  the  beautiful  girl,  too  white.    Gold  Hair  4  :  1G5. 

C.  377. 
It  is  beautiful,  But  is  it  true  ?  —  tliy  answer  was  "  In  truth 

Lives  beauty."     Shah  .4.0:  243.     C.  930. 
Beauty.     I  cannot  feed  on  beauty  for  the  sake  Of  beauty  only. 

Para.  1:11.     C.  31. 
Be  its  beauty  Its  sole  duty  !     Pretty  W.  2  :  77.     C.  191. 
Your  worth,  the  first  thing;  let  her  own  come  next  —  Say  what 

you  did  through  her,  and  she  through  you  —  The  praises  of 

her  beauty  afterward  !     Colombe  2  :  218.    C.  24G. 
And    fixes   a   beauty  never   to   fade.      Stat,   and  B.  2 :  326. 

C.  285. 
I  desire  to  be  able,  ...  to  descry  beauty  in  corruption  where 

others  see  foulness  only.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  355.     C.  297. 
(beauty  in  distress,  Beauty  whose  tale  is  the  town-talk  beside, 

Never  lacks  friendship's  arm  about  her  neck).     R.  and  B. 

3  :  G2.     C.  439. 
this  young   beauty  with  the   thumping  purse  ?      R.  and  B. 

3:113.     C.  459. 
the  Teian  teaches  us,  for  gift,  Not  strength,  —  man's  dower, 

—  but  beauty,  nature  gave.     R.  and  B.  3  :32,5.     C.  542. 
How  so  much  beauty  is  compatible  With  so  much  innocence  ! 

R.  and  B.  3 :  337.     C.  547. 
All  with  breasts  that  beat  for  beauty.    Chris.-Eve  4  :  17.    C.  322. 
Or  say  there  's  beauty  with  no  soul  at  all  —  I  never  saw  it. 

Fra  Lippo  4  :  78.     C.  344. 
If  you  get  simple  beauty  and  naught  else.  You  get  about  the 

best  thing  God  invents.     Fra  Lippo  4  :  78.     C.  344. 
That  't  is  not  beauty  makes  the  lasting  love.    In  a  B.  4:'.  143. 

C.  3G8. 
Nothing  but  beauty  in  a  Hand  ?     /.  Lee  4  :  1G2.     C.  376. 
this  young  beauty,  round  and    sound    As  a  mountain-apple. 

Z>(s  JZ.  4:175.     C.  380. 
a  beauty  buried  everywhere.     If   we  have  souls,  know  how 

to  see  and  use.     Red  Cott.  5:2.     C.  737. 
Then  she  is  forty  full:  you  cannot  judge  What  beauty  was  her 

portion  at  eighteen.     Red  Cott.  5  :  20.      C  744. 
captive  to  the  beauty  evermore.  For  life,  for  death,  for  heaven, 

for  hell,  her  own.     Red  Cott.  5  :  34.     C.  749. 
O  you  exceeding  beauty,  bosomful  Of  liglits  and  shades,  mur- 
murs and  silences,     /nu  A.  5  :270.     C.  784. 
Beauty  's  the  prize-flower  which  dispenses  eye  From  peering 

into  what  has  nourished  root.     Inn  A.  5  :274.     C.  785. 
Suggested  by  a  line's  lapse  see  arise  All  evident  the  beautj\ 

Chris.  Sm.  6  :  316.     C.  960. 
Beauty's,     beauty's  silken  bond,  The   weakness   that  subdues 

the  strong,  and  bows  Wisdom  alike  and  folly.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  330.    C.  544. 


16  BEDFORD  — BELIEVING 

Bedford.     'T  was  Bedford  Special  Assize,  one  daft  Midsum- 
mer's Day.     Ned  B.  6  :  143.     C.  887. 
Bee.     crisp  buds  a  struggling  bee  Uncruniples,  caught  by  sweet 
he  clambers  through.     Ger.  de  L.  6  :34C.     C.  971. 
All   the  breath  and  the  bloom  of  the  j^ear  in  the  bag  of  one 
bee.     Sum.  Bon.  6  :  393;  7: 11.     C.  988. 
Bee's.     The  bee's  kiss,  now!     Gondola  2  :2G5.     C.  262. 
Beethoven's.     Beethoven's  Titan  mace  Smote  the  immense  to 
storm,  Mozart  would  by  a  finger's  lifting  chase.  La.  S.  6  :  07. 
C.  855. 
Beggar.     One  —  when,  a  beggar,  he  prepares  to  plunge.  One 
—  when,   a   prince,  he  rises  with   his  pearl.      Para.  1:46. 
C.  19. 
Beggars.     Beggars  can  scarcely  be  choosers:  but  stUl —  ah,  the 

pity,  the  pity  !  Up  —  Down  2  :  34.  C.  175. 
Beginning.  One  spirit  to  command,  and  one  to  love  And  to 
believe  in  it  and  do  its  best.  Poor  as  that  is,  to  help  it  — 
why,  the  world  Has  been  won  many  a  time,  its  length  and 
breadth.  By  just  such  a  beginning  !  A  Blot  2  :  167.  C.  226. 
Beginnings.     They  always   said,  such  premature    Beginnings 

never  could  endure  !     Italian  2  :  256.     C.  259. 
Belief.     Do  you  continue  in  the  old  belief  ?     Where  blackness 
bides   unbroke,   must   devils   brood  ?      R.  and  B.  3 :  470. 
C.  598. 
belief,  As  unbelief  before,  shakes  us  by  fits.     Bishop  B.  4  :  95. 

C.  351. 
Belief  or  unbelief  Bears  upon  life,  determines  its  whole  course, 

Begins  at  its  beginning.     Bishop  B.  4  :97.     C.  351. 
Naked  belief  in  God  .  .  .  sears  too  much  The  sense  of  con- 
scious creatures  to  be  borne.     Bishop  B.  4  :  106.     C.  355. 
O  worthy  of  belief  I  hold  it  was.     Pan  6  :  188.     C.  909. 
call  belief  Belief  indeed,   nor  grace  with  such  a  name  The 

easy  acquiescence.     Shah  A.  6 -.2^3.     C.  931. 
evidence  Worthv  to  warrant  the  large  word  —  belief.   Shah  A . 

6  :  244.     C.  931. 
It 's  unpleasant  work  Their  chop  and  change,  unsettling  one's 
belief.     Dev.  6  :  430;  7: 92.     C.  1003. 
Belief's,     belief's  fire,  once  in  us,  Makes  of  all  else  mere  stuff 

to  show  itself.     Bishop  B.  4  :  104.     C.  354. 
Believe.     Sun-treader,  I   believe  in  God  and  truth  And  love. 
Paw.  1:25.     C.  11. 
Difficult  to  believe,  yet  possible.     R.  and  B.  3  :  58.     C.  437. 
Let  man  believe  me,  whose  last  breath  is  spent  In  blessing 
my  defender  from  my  soul  !     Inn  A.  5  :314.     C.  801. 
Believed.     I'd  lie  so,  I  should  be  believed.      Waring  2:271. 

C.  265. 
Believing.     Come,  come,  it 's  best  believing,  if  we  may;  You 
can't  but  own  that !     Bishop  B.  4  :  98.     C.  351. 


BELLS  — BETRAYING  17 

Bells.     The  air  broke  into  a  mist  with  bells.     Patriot  2  :  232. 

C.  251. 
Bellerophon's.     The  Etruscan  monster,  the  three-headed  thing, 

Bellerophon's  foe  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  428.     C.  582. 
Belong,     they  would  belong  To  what  they  worship.    Sor.  1: 204. 

C.  79. 
Beneficence.      Blame    your    beneficence,     O    Court,    O   sun, 

Whereof   the  beamy  smile  affects   my  flight!     R.  and  B. 

3  :  333.     C.  545. 
Benevolence.     Who  contravenes  Assertion    that   a    tragedy 

exists   In  any  stoppage  of   benevolence.     Red  Cott.  5  :  17. 

C.  743. 
Beseech.     Sirs,  I  beseech  you  by  blood-sympathy.     R.  aiid  B. 

3 : 404.     C.  572. 
Besotted.     Why  did  a  middle-aged  not-silly  man  Show  him- 
self thus  besotted  all  at  once?     R.  and  B.  3  :42.     C.  431. 
Best,     your  love,  give  her  the  best  of  you  to  see.     Soul's   Tr. 

2  :  353.     C.  29G. 
Two   poor  ignoble   hearts  who   did  their   best  .  .  .  To  .  .  . 

scramble  through  The  world's  mud,  careless  .  .  .  Provided 

they    might  .  .   .  keep    clean  Their    child's    soul,  one  soul 

white  enough  for  three.     R.  and  B.  3  :  13.      C.  419. 
The  best,  he  knew  and  feigned,  the  worst  he  took.     R.  and  B. 

3:3C8.   C.  558. 
Our  best  is  bad,  nor  bears  thy  test  ;  Still,  it  should   be  our 

very  best.     Chris.-Eoe  4  :  11.     C.  320. 
Ah,  the  earth's  best  can  be  but  the  earth's  best  !  Bishop  B. 

4:103.    C.  354. 
Such   was   my  rule   of   life  ;   I  worked  my  best,  Subject  to 

ultimate  judgment,   God's    not  man's.      Prince  H.  4:337. 

C.  684. 
Since  there  can  be  for  each,  one  Best,  no  more,  such  Best,  For 

body  and  mind  of    him,  abolishes  the    rest  O'  the  simply 

Good  and  Better.     Fifine  4  :  418.     C.  721. 
Aspire  to  the  Best !     But  which  ?   There  are  Bests  and  Bests 

so  many.     Sol.  and  B.  6  :  201.     C.  914. 
I  ask  no  more  Than  smiling  witness  that  I  do  my  best  With 

doubtful  doctrine.     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  295.     C.  952. 
but  man's  best  and  woman's  worst  amount   So  nearly  to  the 

same  thing.     Dan.  Bar.  6  :  309.     C.  958. 
Put  forward  your  best  foot!    Respecta.  2  :  80.     C.  191. 
Oh,  which  were  best,  to  roam  or  rest  ?     The  land's  lap  or  the 

water's  breast?     Gondola  2  :  265.     C.  263. 
what  began  best,  can't  end  worst,  Nor  what  God  blessed  once, 

prove  accurst.     App.  Fail.  4  :  259.     C.  41.3. 
Betraying,     a  voice  is  in  my  ears  That  spite  of  all  this  smil- 
ing and  soft  speech  You  are  betraying  me  !     Luria  2  :  382. 

C.  307. 


18  BETTER  — BISHOP 

Better.     Though  I  be  lost,  I  know  which  is  the  better,  never 

fear.    Of  vice  or  virtue,  purity  or  lust,  Nature  or    trick  ! 

Pippa  1:'33U.     C.  133. 
Better  this  present  than  a  past  like  that.     Chllde  R.  2  :  333. 

C.  288. 
you  only  do  right  to  believe  you  must  get  better  as  you  get 

older.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  359.     C.  298. 
Since  better  is  "  too  much  "  than  "  not  enough."     R.  and  B. 

3  :  305.     C.  535. 

Or  better  than  the  best,  or  nothing  serves  !    R.  and  B.  3:  391. 

C.  567. 
Still  hoping  ever  and  anon  To  reach  one  eve  the  Better  Land  ! 

Eas.-Day  4  :  oo,     C.  335. 
Nothing  can  be  as  it  has  been  before  ;  Better,  so  call  it,  only 

not  the  same.     /.  Lee  4  :  160.     C.  375. 
Make  tlie  low  nature  better  by  your  throes  !     J.  Lee  4  :161. 

C.  375. 
Better  lack  food  than  feast,  a  Dives  in  the  —  wain  Or  reign 
or  train  —  of  Charles  !     Ned  B.  6  :  147.     C.  890. 
Bettered.     Still  bettered  more,  the  more  remembered,  so  Do 
new  stars  bud  while  I  but  search  for  old.    R.  and  B.  3  :  272. 
C.  523. 
Soul,  Nothing  has  been  which  shall  not  bettered  be  Hereafter. 
Ger.  de  L.  6:351.     C.  973. 
Bewailment.     Lyric  bewailment  fit  to  move  a  stone.     Arl.  A. 

5 : 132.     C.  041. 
Bible-truth.     I  and  all  such  boys  of  course  Started  with  the 

same  stock  of  Bible-truth.     Sludge  4  :  242.     C.  406. 
Bier.     The  land  has  none  left  such  as  he  on  the  bier.  Oh,  would 

we  might  keep  thee,  my  brother  !     Saul  2  :  49.     C.  180. 

Bird.     A  great  black  bird,  Apollyon's  bosom-friend.     Childe  R. 

2  :  335.     C.  288. 

surprise  The  rare  bird,  sprinkle  salt  on  phoenix'  tail,  And  so 

secure  the  nest  a  sparrow-hawk.    R.  and  B.  3  :  75.     C  444. 

bird,  (Rare  city-visitant,  talked  of,  scarce  seen  or  heard,)  Fijine 

4  :  386.     C.  703. 

Bird's,     a  bird's  weight  can  break  the  infant  tree  Which  after 
holds  an  aery  in  its  arms.     Luria  2  :  394.     C.  312. 

Birds,      small  birds  said  to  themselves  What  should  soon  be 
actual  song.      Waring  2  :  273.     C.  265. 
Birds  assemble  for  their  bedtime,  soft  the  tree-top  swell  sub- 
sides.    La  S.G:  68.     C.  855. 

Birth.     Is  birth  a  privilege  and  power  or  no  ?    R.  and  B.  3  :41. 
C.  430. 

Birthplace,     a  birthplace  Where  the   richness   ran  to  flowers. 
J'ara.  1 :  53.     C.  22. 

Bishop,     we   know   that  he  is  a  saint   and  all  that   a  bishop 
sliould  be.     Pippa  1  :  350.     C.  138. 


BISHOP  — BLESSING  19 

Bishop.  (One  's  a  Bishop,  one  's  j^one  to  tlie  Bench,  And  one  's 
gone  —  well,  to  the  Devil.)     Don.  6  :  195.     C.  911. 

Bishops.  Brisk  bishops  with  the  world's  musk  still  uubrushed 
From  the  rochet.     R.  and  B.  3  :  231.      C.  50G. 

Biter,  for  the  biter  is  bit,  Tiie  spy  caught  in  somnolence. 
Ponte  .4.  6  :  409  ;  7: 51.     C.  995. 

Bitter,     how  bitter  not  to  grave  On  his  soul's  hands'  palms  one 
fair  good  wise  thing.     /.  Lee  4  :  100.     C.  375. 
A  bitter  heart  that  bides  its  time  and  bites.     Caliban  4  :  210. 
C.  393. 

Bitter-pungent.  Sage-leaf  is  bitter-pungent  —  so  's  a  quince. 
Prol.  Fer.  6  :  239.     C.  929. 

Bitter-STweet.  Felicitous  annoy,  as  bitter-sweet  As  when  the 
virgin-band,  the  victors  chaste.  Feel  at  the  end  the  earthly 
garments  drop.     R.  and  B.  3  :  210.     C.  498. 

Black,    white  preceded  black.  Black  shall  give  way  to  white  as 
duly.     Bean-St.  6  :  273.     C.  943. 
black's  soul  of  black  Beyond  white's  power  to  disintensifv. 
Bean-St.  6 -.276.     C.  943. 

Bladder,  the  late  puffed  bladder,  pricked,  shows  lank  and 
skinny.     Pietro  6  :  170.     C.  900. 

Blame.     Each  as  on  his  sole  head,  failer  or  succeeder,  Lay  the 
blame  or  lit  the  praise.     Epil  Fer.  6  :  283.     C.  946. 
Beware  ye  blame  desert  for  unsuccess.  Disparage  each  exjie- 

dient  else  to  praise.     R.  and  B.  3  :  339.     C.  547. 
Heart-sick  at  having  all  his  world  to  blame.    R.  and  B.  3  :  378. 
C.  562. 

Blamevrorthiness.  Blame  I  can  bear  though  not  blameworthi- 
ness.    R.  and  B.  3  :  98.     C.  453. 

Blanc.  —  Blanc,  supreme  above  his  earth-brood,  needles  red 
and  white  and  green.  Horns  of  silver,  fangs  of  crystal  set  on 
edge  in  his  demesne.     La  S.  6  :  56.     C.  8-50. 

Blank.  There  's  a  blank  issue  to  that  fiery  thrill.  Sor.  1 :  314. 
C.  123. 

Blasphemy.  The  barrel  of  blasphemy  broached  once,  who 
Inmgs  ?     Fu.'^t   6  :  382.     C.  986. 

Bleed.  See,  I  bleed  these  tears  in  the  dark  Till  comfort  come 
and  the  last  be  bled.     Too  Late  4  :  180.     C.  381. 

Blemishes,  overflusli  those  blemishes  with  all  Tlie  glow  of 
general  goodness  they  disturb  ?     Para.  1 :  80.     C.  32. 

Blend.  A  need  to  blend  .  .  .  Bury  themselves,  .  .  .  lu  some- 
thing not  themselves.     Sor.  1 :  204.     C.  79. 

Bless.     My  whole  heart  rises  up  to  bless  Your  name  in  pride 
and  thankfulness  !     Last  Ride  2  :  279.     C.  267. 
Balaam-like  I  bless,  not  curse.     At  the  M.  o -.^Z^.     C.  808. 

Blessing.     Tlie  fact  is,  there  's  a  blessing  on  the  hearth,  A  spe- 
cial providence  for  fatherhood  !    R.  and  B.  3  :  281.     C.  526. 
O  blessing,  O  superlatively  big  With  blessedness  beyond  all 
blessing  dreamed.     Red  Cott.  5  :81.     C.  767. 


20  BLEST  — BLOTCH 

Blest.     Lose  who  may  —  I  still  can  say,  Those  who  win  heaven, 

l)lest  are  tliey  !     One  Way  2  :  76.     C.  190. 
Blind.     And   habitude  that   gives  a  blind  man  sight   At  the 
practised  fiugei -ends  of  him.     R.  and  B.  S -.'SSi.     C.  5G4. 
All  blindness,  bravery  and  obedience  !  —  blind  ?    Ay,  as  a  man 

would  be  inside  the  sun.     R.  and  B.  3  :  390.     C.  oG7. 
never  was  so  blind,  Even  through  death-mist,  as  to  grope  in 
gloom  For  cheer  beside  a  bonfire.    Fr.  Fu.  6  :  331.     C.  905. 
Blind-folk.     Happier    the   thrifty  blind-folk  labor.   With   up- 
turned eye  while  the  liand  is  busy.    Old  Pict.  2  :39.    C.  170. 
Blindfold.     Here,  blindfold   througli   the   maze  of   things  we 
walk  By  a  slight  clue  of  false,  true,  right  and  wrong.   King 
C.  1:400.     C.  157. 
Bliss.     Where'er  1   look  is  fire,  where'er  I  listen  Music,  and 
where  I  tend  bliss  evermore.     Para.  1:113.     C.  45. 
Just  for  the  obvious  human  bliss.     Bij  Fire.2  :6.3.     C.  180. 
Be  great,  be  good,  love,  learn,  have  potency  of  hand  Or  heart 
or  head,  —  what  boots  ?     You   die,  nor   understand  What 
bliss  might  be  in  life.     Fifne  4  :  395.      C.  708. 
No  bliss  that 's  finer,  fuller,  Only  —  bliss  that  lasts,  they  sav, 
and  fain  would  I  believe.     Ejyi'l.  Tioo  Cam.  6  :  203.     C.  938. 
Blood.     Oh   heart  !  oh  blood  that   freezes,  blood  that  burns  ! 
Love  2:21.     C.  172. 
He  that  strove  thus  e\'il's  lump  with  good  to  leaven,  Let  him 
give  his  blood  at  last  and  get  his  heaven  !     Before  2  :  86. 
C.  194. 
pouring  forth  the  impatient  blood  To  show  its  color  whether 

false  or  no  !     Luria  2  :  371.     C.  303. 
Those    daily,  nightly  drippings    in  the   dark  Of  the   heart's 
blood,  the  world   lets   drop  away  Forever.      Luria  2  :  381. 
C.  307. 
frightened  pause  Before  that  serpentining  blood  which  steals 

Out  of  the  darkness.     Ari.  A.  5  :238.     C.  680. 
Would  my  blood  for  ink  suffice  !     Forgiv.  5  :367.     C.  820. 
blood  thy  extortions  have  wrung  from  the  flesh  Of  thy  clients. 
Ponte  A.  6  :410  ;  7:53.     C.  995. 
Blood-oflfering.     devise  Blood-offering  for  sweat-service,  lend 
the  rod  A  pungency  through  pickle  of  our  own  ?   R.  and  B. 
3  :  446.     C.  590. 
Blood-vT^armth.    Trust  me,  blood-warmth  never  yet  Betokened 

strong  will  !     Forgiv.  5  :  365.     C.  819. 
Blossom.     This  is  a  spray  the  Bird  clung  to.  Making  it  blos- 
som with  pleasure.     jMhcon.  2  :  73.     C.  189. 
To  just  see  earth,  and  hardly  be  seen,  And  blossom  in  heaven 
instead.     Gold  Hair  4  :  165.     C.  377. 
Blot,     a  blot  which  breaks  Hell's  black  off  in  pale  flakes  for 

fear  of  mine.     R.  and  B.  3  :  166.     C.  480. 
Blotch.     'T  is  but  a  spot  as  yet :   but  it  will  break  Into  a  hide- 
ous blotch  if  overlooked.     Para.  1:41.     C.  17. 


BLUNDER  — BOOKS  21 

Blunder.     Leave  ns  to  bury  the  blunder,  sweep  things  smooth  ! 

R.  and  B.  3  :  170.     C.  482. 
Blur,     the  opprobrious  blur  Against  all  peace  and  joy  and  light 

and  life.     R.  and  B.  3  :223.     C.  503. 
Boaster.      Not    that    the    burly  boaster  did    one    jot  O'  the 

little  was  to  do.     R.  and  B.  3  :  408.     C.  597. 
Body,     strong  Rare  spirit,  fettered  to  a  stubborn  body,  En- 
deavoring to  subdue  it.     Para.  1 :  56.     C.  23. 
can  I  change  my  soul  ?     And  this  wronged  body,  worthless 
save  when  tasked  Under  that  soul's  dominion.     Para.  1:77. 
C.  31. 
This    body    had    no   soul   before,    but   slept.      Pippa  1:349. 

C.  138. 
Give  us  no  more  of  body  than  shows  soul  !      Fra  Lippo  4:  78. 

C.  344. 
Thy  body  at  its  best,  How  far  can  that  project  thy  soul  on  its 

lone  way  ?     Ben  Ezra  4  :  186.     C.  384. 
outward   shape   And   inward   fashion,    body   matching   soul. 

Balau.  4  :  296.     C.  615. 
Body  and  soul  are  one  thing,  with  two  names  For  more  or 

less  elaborated  stuff.     Red  Cott.  5  :  61.     C.  759. 
Stalwart  body  idly  yoked   to   stunted   spii'it.     La  S.   6  :  01. 
C.  852. 
Body's.     The   body's  habit  wholly  laudable.     Karshish  4 :  66. 

C.  339. 
Bodies,     bodies    show  me  minds,  That,  through  the  outward 

sign,  the  inward  grace  allures.     Fijine  4  :393.     C.  707. 
Boil.     When  frothy  spume  and  frequent  sputter  Prove  that  the 
soul's  depths  boil  in  earnest  !     Chris.-Eve  4  :  31.      C.  327. 
Bold.     Thus,  bold  Yet  self-mistrusting,  should  man  bear  him- 
self.    R.  and  B.  3  :  395.     C.  569. 
Be  bold  —  but  not  too  rasli  !     Muley.  6  :  165.     C.  898. 
Boldest.     Boldest  of  hearts  that  ever  braved  the  sun,  Took 
sanctuary  within  the  holier  blue.     R.  and  B.  3  :  32.      C.  427. 
Bolt,     received  bolt  full  in  breast ;  But  no  less  bore  up,  giddily 

perhaps.     R.  and  B.  3  :  62.     C.  438. 
Bones.     To  him  the  bones  their  inmost  secret  jneld,  Each  notch 

and  nodule  signify  their  use.     R.  and  B.  3  :  321,     C.  540. 
Book.     A  bitter-sweetling  of  a  book.     Sor.  1:  231.     C.  89. 
The  Book  !     I  turn  its  medicinable  leaves  In  Loudon  now. 
R.  and  B.  3  :  18.     C.  421. 
Book's.     Yet   here  's   the   sting  in   death  —  I  've   an  author's 
pride:  I  want  my  Book's  survival.     P<V/ro  6  :  179.     C.  738. 
Books.     AVhat  books  are  in  the  desert  ?     Para.  1:36.     C.  16. 
It  all  grew  out  of  the  books  I  write.     Time's  R.  2  :  251.     C. 

258. 
When  he  had  gathered  all  books  had  to  give  !      Gram.  Fun. 
2  :  311.     C.  279. 


22  BOOKS  — BRAIN'S 

Books,     conversancy  with  the  books  that  teach,  The  arts  that 

help.    R.  and  B.  3  :  472.     C.  599. 
One  of  those  small  books,  the  truly  great.  We  never  know 

enough,  yet  know  so  well  ?     Red  Cott.  5:5.     C.  738. 
Boriie.     Ask   yourself,    had   you   borne  a  baiting  thus  ?    Was 

it  enough  to  make  a   wise  man  mad  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  Gl. 

C.  438. 
I  think  I  have  borne  enough  and  long  enough,  And  patiently 

enough,  the  world  remarks.     In  a  B.  -i  :  144.     C.  369. 
Boston.     Boston  's  a  hole,  the  herring-pond  is  wide.      Sludge 

4  :  257.     C.  412. 
Bottom-praise,     still  the  bottom-praise  of  all,  Whatever  be 

tiie  dregs,  that  drop  's  pure  gold  !     Litria  2  :381.     C.  307. 
Bound.     Who,  then,  dares  hold,  emancipated   thus —  His  fel- 
low shall  continue  bound  ?      Why  6  :  388.     C.  948. 
Bounds.     Yet  there  be  bounds  to  man's  emotion,  checks  To  an 

immoderate  astonishment.     R.  and  B.  3  :339.     C.  547. 
Bo"wed.     Plucked  at  law's   robe  a-rustle   through  the   courts, 

liowed  down  to  kiss  divinity's  buckled  shoe.      R.  and  B. 

3:437.     C.586. 
Bcv/er.     touched    athwart   her   trellised  bliss   Of    blush-rose 

bower,     /mi  /I.  5: 271.     C.  784. 
Bo'wl.     Let  argument  slide,  and  then  deliver  swift  Some  bowl 

from  quite  an  unguessed  point  of  stand.    R.  and  B.  3  :284. 

C.  527. 
Boy.     All  women  are  not  mothers  of  a  boy.  Though  they  live 

twice  the  length  of  my  whole  life.    R.and  B.3  -.iilo.    C. 524. 
Some  have  not  a  boy :  some  have,  but  lose  him,  —  God  knows 

which  Is  worse.     Ivan  6  :  135.     C.  883. 
Boy's,     the  boy's  Passionate  impulse  .  .  .  Which,  at  first  touch, 

truth,  bubble-like,  destroys.     Joch.  6  :  231.     C.  92G. 
Boyhood,     that  boyhood  of  wonder  and  hope.  Present  promise 

and  wealth  of  the  future.     Saul  2  :50.     C.  181. 
Boyishness,     some  old  day  Of  dim  and  done- with  boyishness. 

C7(m.  ^'m.  G:312.     C.  959. 
Braggarts.     Braggarts,    who    wring    hands   wont    to  flourish 

swords.     Ari.  A.5: 101.     C.  G29. 
Brain.     Oh  I  must  feel  your  brain  prompt  mine,  Your  heart 

anticipate  my  heart.     By  Fire  2  :  G3.     C.  186. 
how   heart  moves    brain,  and    how  both  move    hand.    What 

mortal  ever  in  entirety  saw  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  19.     C.  422. 
Brain-deposit,     the  inner  spectrum,  filtered  through  the  eye, 

His  brain-deposit,  bred  of  many  a  drop.     R.  and  B.  3  :  322. 

C.  541. 
Brain-vibrios.     Brain-vibrios  —  wriggle    clear  of  protoplasm 

Into  minute  life  that 's  one  fury-fit.    Tico  Poets  6  :  74.  C.  866. 
Brain's.     A  turmoil  of  the  particles  disturbed.  Brain's  worka- 
day performance.     Chris.  Sm.  6  :  315.     C.  960. 


BRAKE  — BRIERS  23 

Brake,     that     brake    where    siintlawn    feeds    the    stalks    Of 

withered  fern  with  gold.     Sor.  1:21G.     C.  84. 
Branch,     every  .  .  .  branch  .  .  .  shakes  loose  dark's  clinging 

dregs,  waves  free  In  dripping  glory.     Ger.  de  i.  G:348. 

C.  972. 
Brass.     Glorify  no  brass  That  shines   like  burnished  gold  in 

noonday  glare,  For  fools  !     R.  and  B.  3  :470.     C.  598. 
Why  should    I    blame  the  brass   which,  burnished  up,  Will 

blaze,  to  all  but  me,  as  good  as  gold  ?      Forrjiu.  o  :  361. 

C.  818. 
Brave.     Untrod  Leave  this  last  step  we  reach,  nor  brave  the 

finger  of  God  !     Hal.  and  Hob  6  :  130.     C.  880. 
Braved.     Did  her  behest  and  braved  the  consequence.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  128.     C.  4G.5. 

Brazen,     subtle  moulder  of  brazen  shapes.    Stat,  and  B.  2  :  327. 

C.  285. 

then  did  the  tongue  O'  the  Brazen  Head  give  license,  "  Time  is 

now  !  "     R.  and  B.  3  :  301.     C.  533. 
Bread.     Why  from  each  clashing   of   his  molars,  ground  To 

make  the  devil  bread  from  out  my  grist.    R.  and  B.  3  :  426. 

C.  581. 
Breaks.     In  shagrag  beard  and  doleful  doublet,   drops   And 

breaks  his  heart  on  the  outside:  people  prate.     R.  and  B. 

3:151.     C.  474. 
Breaker.     Breaker   of   vows   to  God,  who  crowned  you  first; 

Breaker  of  vows  to  man,  who  kept  you  since.      King  V. 

1:384.     C.  151. 
Breath.     Come,  't  is  too  much  good  breath  we  waste  in  words. 

R.  and  B.  3:  A02.     C.  572. 
A   tenure   of   breath   at   your   lips'  decree.      J.  Lee  4 :  164. 

C.  376. 
A  breath  of  God  made  manifest  in  flesh  Subjects  the  world  to 

change,  from  time  to  time.     Prince  H.  4  :  338.     C.  685. 
To  be  the  very   breath  that  moves  the  age.  Means  not,   to 

have  breath  drive  you  bubble-like  Before  it  —  but  yourself 

to  blow.     Red  Cott.  5  :4S.     C.  754. 
the  breath   is  not  the  flute;  Both  together  make  the  music: 

either  marred  and  all  is  mute.     La  S.  6  :  62.     C.  853. 
Breathe,     his  business  simply  was  to  breathe  And  take  each 

day's  new  bounty.     Mihrab  6  :  254.     C.  9.35. 
Bretagne.     Bretagne,  ancientest    of    provinces   And    noblest. 

Druses  2  :  105.     C.  200. 
Breviary.     Pray,  in  what  rubric  of  the  breviary  Do  vou  find  it 

registered  —     R.  and  B.  3  :  127.     C.  464. 
Bride.     He  has  taken  a  bride  To  his  gruesome  side.     Lovers^  Q. 

2:28.     C.  173. 
Briers,     we  try  and  cull  Briers,  thistles,  from  our  private  plot, 

To  mar  God's  ground.     Eas.-Day  4  :  37.    C.  328. 


24  BRIMSTONE  — BRUTAL 

Brimstone.  A  saint's  nose  Scents  brimstone  though  incense 
be  burned  for  a  hire.     Ponte  yl .  6  : 409;  7: 50.     C.  995. 

British  Public.  Well,  British  Public,  ye  wlio  like  me  not, 
(Ciod  love  von  !)  and  will  have  your  proper  laugh.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  10.     C.  418. 

So,  British  Public,  who  may  like  me  yet,  (Marry  and  amen  !) 
learn  one  lesson  hence.     R.  and  B.  3  :477.     C.  601. 
Briton.     No  Briton  's  to  be  balked  !    App.  Fail.  4  :  257.    C.  412. 
Broke.     You  broke  your  father's  heart  superiorly  To  gather 
his  succession  —  never  blush  !     Colomhe  2  :  184.     C.  232. 
Many  the  great  heart  broke  beneath  its  girdle-girth  !      Fifine 
4  :  416.     C.  720. 
Brook.     God's  service  is  established  here  As  he  determines  fit, 
and  not  your  way.  And  this  you  cannot  brook.     Para.  1  :  99. 

C.  39. 

Brooks,      brooks  .  .  .  With   their  obstinate,    all   but   hushed 

voices  —  "  E'en  so,  it  is  so  !  "     Saul  2  :  58.     C.  184. 
Brother-saint.      The   saints   in  imaged  row  bowed   each   his 
head  For  welcome  to  a  brother-saint  come  back.     R.  and  B. 
3  :  359.     C.  555. 
Brother's,     brother's  speech  We  need,  speech  where  an  accent's 
change  gives  each  The  other's  soul.     150^1:298.     C.  116. 
I  do  believe  a  brother's  love  For  a  sole  sister  must  exceed 

them  all.     A  Blot  2  :  161.     C.  223. 
,a  brother's  love  exceeds  All  the  world's  love  in  its  unworldli- 
ness.     A  Blot  2  :  162.     C.  224. 
Brow,     that  great  brow  And  the  spirit-small  hand  propping  it. 
By  Fire.  2:0,2.     C.  186. 
'twas  in  his  very  brow  Alwavs  to  knit  himself  against  the 

world.     R.  and  B.  3  :39.     C.  429. 
Her  brow  had  not  the  right  line,  leaned  too  mnch.  Painters 
would  say  ;   they  like  the  straight-up  Greek.     R.  and  B. 
3  :  233.     C.  507. 
such  a  brow  His  eyes  had  to  live  under  !     How  it  S.  4 :  59. 

C.  336. 
Unbury  that  brow  !     Look  up,  that  thv  jndge  may  read  clear 
in  thine  eyes  !     Fust  6  :  368.     C.  980. 
ErovT^ning.     That  bard's  a  Browning;    he  neglects  the  form. 
/?uiyl.  5:243.     C.  773. 
But  then,   "  No   dream  's  worth  waking  "  —  Browning  says. 
Der.  6:430;  7:92.     C.  1003. 
Brunt.     Bear  the  brunt,  in  a  minute  pay  glad  life's  arrears  Of 

pain,  darkness  and  cold.     Prospice  4  :216.     C.  395. 
Brush,     a    brush    the    painter   fed   With    rainbow-substance. 

Chris.  Sm.  6  :  313.     C.  959. 
Brutal.     When    law    grew    brutal,    outbroke,    overbore    And 
glutted  hunger  on  the  truth,  at  last.      R.  and  B.  3  :  361. 
C.  555. 


BRUTES  — BUTTERCUPS  25 

Brutes,     the  brutes  Rest  not,  are  anxious  without  visible  cause, 

When  change  is    in  the   elements  at  work,  Which    man's 

trained  senses  fail  to  apprehend.     Luria  2  :  373.     C.  304. 
Brutes  of  his  breeding,  with  one  spark  i'  the  clod  That  served 

for  a  soul,  the  looking  up  to  him.    K.  and  B.  3  :  103.    C.  455. 
Brutish,     without  the  want.  Life,  now  human,  would  be  bru- 
tish.    La  S.  6  :  62.     C.  853. 
Bubble.     That  bubble,  .  .  .  He  had  blown  already  till  he  burst 

his  cheeks,  And  hence  found  soapsuds  bitter.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  43.     C.  431. 
Bubbles.     Spend  fifty  years   in   guarding  bubbles   of  breath, 

Soapsuds  with  air  i'  the    belly,  gilded  brave.      R.  and  B. 

3  :  153.     C.  475. 
Bud.     But   this  bud,  Bit    through   and   burned   black   by  the 

tempter's  tooth.     R.  and  B.  3  .-428.     C.  582. 
Not  the  worst  bud  —  who   can   tell?      Humll.  6:392;  7:9. 

C.  988. 
Buds,     white  with  coming  buds.  Like  the  bright  side  of  a  sor- 
row.    Pan.  1:2.     C.  3. 
Buffet.     Returned  him  buffet  ratiocinative  — Ay,  in  the  reasou- 

er's  own  interest.     R.  and  B.  3  :  340.     C.  548. 
Builder.     Builder  and  maker.  Thou,  of  houses  not  made  with 

hands!     AM  F.  4  :  184.     C.  383. 
Building.     (People  like  building  where  they  used  to  beg).     R. 

and  B.  3  :  148.     C.  473. 
Bull.     Does  the  furious  bull  Pick  out  four  help-mates  from  the 

grazing  herd.     R.  and  B.  3  :  140.     C.  470. 
Bull-front,     that  thin  flitting   instantaneous  steel   'Gainst  the 

blind  bull-front  of  a  brute-force  world.  Luria  2  :  364.  C,  300. 
Bunglers.     Irrational  bunglers!     So,  the  living  truth  Revealed 

to  strike  Pan, dead,  ducks  low  at  last.     R.  and  B.  3:447. 

C.  590. 
Bunyan.     Where   Bunvan's  Statue  stands  facing  where  stood 

his  Jail.     Ned  B.  Q:  151.     C.  892. 
Buononcini.      Handel    reigns  —  supreme?      By    no     means! 

Bnononcini's  work  is  theme  For  fit  laudation  of  the  impar- 
tial few.     Chas.  A.  6  :356.     C.  975. 
Burned.     He  laid  a  hand  on  me  that  burned  all  peace.  All  joy, 

all  hope,  and  last  all  fear  away.    R.  and  B.  3  :  206.    C.  496. 
Burro'w.      Burrow  awhile   and    build,  broad   on    the  roots  of 

things.     Abt  V.  4  :  182.     C.  382. 
Bush.     Terror  with  beautv,  like  the  Bush  Burning  but  uncou- 

sumed.     Prol.  A.  6  :390;  7:2.     C.  987. 
Biists.     sundry  amazing  busts.     R.  and  B.  3:2.     C.  415. 
Butcher,     eying  him,  As  eyes  the  butcher  the  cast  panting  ox 

That  feels  his  fate  is  come.     R.  and  B.  3  :250.     C.  513. 
Buttercups.      The  buttercups,  ...  —  Far  brighter  than  this 

gaudy  melou-flower!     Home-T.  A.  2  :'i6.     C.  179. 


26  BUTTERFLY  —  CALUMNY 

Butterfly,     some  finished  butterfly,  Some  breathing  diamond- 

iiake  with  leaf-gold  fans.     R.  and  B.  3  :  27.     C.  425. 
Fain  would  act  the    butterfly  before   he  Las  played  out  the 

worm!     Za  5.  6  :  70.     C.  856. 
Button.     Where  a  button  goes,  't  were  an  epigram  To  ofYcr 

tlie  stamp  of  tlie  very  Guelph.    Stat,  and  B.  2  :328.    C.  2SG, 
Buttressed,     back  he  fell,  was  buttressed  there  By  the  window 

all  aflame  with  morning-red.     R.  and  B.  3  :  223.     C.  503. 
Bygones,     healthy  minds  let  bygones  be,  Leave  old  crimes  to 

grow  young  and  virtuous-like  I'  the  sun  and  air.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  111.     C.  458. 

Byng.     Kentish  Sir  Byng  stood  for  his  King.      Marching  2  : 2. 

C.  103. 

By-vyord.  Plague-stricken  and  strip2)ed  naked  to  all  eyes,  A 
proverb  and  by-word  in  all  mouths!    Luria  2  :386.    C.  309. 

Europe's  spectacle  And  the  world's  by-word!  King  V.  1:374. 
C.  147. 

A  proverb  and  a  by-word  men  will  mouth  At  the  cross-way,  in 
the  corner,  up  and  down.     R.  and  B.  3  :  ICO.     C.  478. 


c 

Cabbage-plot,     whose    cabbage-plot   Throve   dubiously  since 

turned  fools'-paradise.     R.  and  B.  3  :38.     C.  429. 
Cachinnation.     He  moved  to  mirth  and  cachinuation,  all  Or 

nearly  all.     R.  and  B.  ^ -.2^^.     C.  531. 
Cackle.      Clear    cackle    is    easily    uttered  !      Pacch.    5 :  331. 

C.  807. 
Cadence.     Some  captivating  cadence  still  a-lisp  O'  the  poet's 

lyre  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  340.     C.  548. 
Caesar.     He  's  long  since  out  of  Csesar  (eight  years  old)  And  as 

for  tripping  in  Eutropius  ...     it.  and  B.  3  :  460.     C.  597. 
Calf-creature.      Calf-creature,    one-part    boy    to    three-parts 

girl.     R.  and  B.  3  :425.    C.  581. 
Callousness.     Proved  wanting  in  ambition,  —  let  us   avouch, 

Since  truth  is  best,  —  in  callousness  of  heart.     Pt.  and  B. 

3  :  74.     C.  443. 
Calm.     Changed  apathv's  calm  to  strife,  bright,  brisk.     Reph. 

6:433;  7:99.     C.  i004. 
He  keeps  his  calm  way  through   insulting  words,  Sarcastic 

looks,  sharp  gestures.     Luria  2  :  387.     C.  309. 
I  keep  calm  ?    Calm  I  '11  keep  as  monk  that  croons  Transcrib- 
ing battle,  earthquake,  famine,  plague.  From  parchment  to 

his  cloister 's  chronicle.     R.  and  B.  3  :  194.     C.  401. 
Calmness.     Calmness    supreme    means    dead    and   therefore 

safe.     Ari.  A.  o-.lZG.     C.  643. 
Calumny.     AVhat  of  the  calumny  I  came  across,  What  o'  the 


CALUMNY  — CASTILIAN  27 

wav  to  the  end  ?  —  the  end  crowns  all.     R.  and  B.  3  :274. 

C.  o23. 
Calumny,     proud  above  The  welter,  plucked  from  the  world's 

calumny,  Stupidity,  simplicity.     R.  and  B.  3:4:09.     C.  598. 
Candle.     As  modest  candle  does  'mid  mountain  fog.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  87.     C.  448. 

Cannot.     In  this  world,  who  can  do  a  thing,  will  not;  And  who 

would  do  it,  cannot,  I  jjerceive.     Andrea  4  :86.     C.  347. 
Canon.     The  young  frank  handsome  courtly  Canon,  .  .  .  The 

priest,  .  .  .  Giuseppe  Caponsacchi.    R.  and  i?.  3  : 9.    C.  418. 
Capacity,     my  soul's  capacity  for  love  widens  —  needs  more 

than  one  object  to  content  it.     SouVs  Tr.  2  :  352.     C.  295. 
Caponsacchi.     True    Caponsacchi,    of    old    Head-i'-the-Saek 

That  fought  at  Fiesole  ere  Florence  was.     R.  and  B.  3  :  61. 

C.  438. 

Cardinal.     Was  friend   and  follower  of  a  cardinal;    Waiting 

the  rather  thus  on  providence.     R.  and  B.  3  :39.     C.  429. 
had  employed  his  youth  and  age  In  culture  of  Rome's  most 

productive  plant  —  A  cardinal.    R.  and  B.  3  :  73.     C.  443. 
Cards.     The  cards  are  all  against  us.    Make  a  push,  Kick  over 

table,  as  shrewd  gamesters  do  !    R.  and  B.  3  :  309.     C.  536. 
Care.     I  can  but  testify  God's  care  for  me  —  no  more,  can  I  — 

It  is  but  for  myself  I  know.     Chris.-Eve  4  :  27.     C.  325. 
Well,  I   care  —  intimately  care  to   have    Experience  how  a 

human  creature  felt  In  after-life.     Tico  Poets  6  :  90.    C.  864. 
For  aught  that  I  should  think,  or  know,  or  care.     Bean-St. 

0 : 282.     C.  946. 
Cares.    Cares  make  peevish:  mine  Weigh  me  (but  'tis  a  secret) 

to  my  grave.     Straf.  1 :  138.     C.  53. 
Carnival.     Here  are  we  at  our  end  of  Carnival;  Prodigious 

gayety  and  monstrous  mirth.     R.  and  B.  3:458.     C.  594. 
Carpers.     Carpers  abound  in  this  misjudging  world.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  301.     C.  533. 

Casa  Guidi.  I  stood  at  home  again  In  Casa  Guidi  by  Felice 
Church.     R.  and  ^.3:3.     C.  415. 

Case-hardened,  for  we  must  learn  to  live.  Case-hardened  at 
all  points,  not  bare  and  sensitive.     F'lfine  4  :428.     C.  727. 

Cash,  the  cash  that 's  God's  sole  solid  in  this  world  !  Sludge 
4:239.     C.  405. 

Casing,  one  must  abate  One's  scorn  of  the  soul's  casing,  dis- 
tinct from  the  soul's  self.     Fifine  4  :  429.     C.  727. 

Casino.  As  when  at  yonr  Casino,  deep  in  dawn,  A  gamester 
says  at  last,  I  play  no  more.     R.  and  B.  3  :  151.     C.  474. 

Castelnuovo.  Castelnuovo's  few  mean  hut-like  homes  Hud- 
dled   together   on   the    hill-foot   bleak.      R.  and  B.  3  :  12. 

C.  419. 

Castilian.  the  Castilian  passionate  blind  blood.  Red  Cott. 
5:29.     C.  747. 


2S  C  AT  —  CHAMPIONSHIP 

Cat.     The  unseen  cat  beneath  the  counterpane.     Inn  A.  5: 272. 

C.  785.  ^ 
Cat-gut.     No  cat-gut  could  swoon  out  so  inuch  of  soul  !     Red 

Colt.  5:7.     C.  739. 
Cat's-paw.     I  pay  you,  My  cat's-paw,  as  I  long  have  yearned 

to  pay  !     Colomhe  2  :  212.     C.  243. 
Catalogue.     AVliich  of  you  did  I  enable  Once  to  slip  inside  my 

l)reast,  There  to  catalogue.     At  the  M.  5  :  333.     C.  808. 
Catullus.     Did   not  Catullus  write   less   seemly   once  ?      Yet 

doctus  and  unblemished  he  abides.   R.  and  B.  3  :  169.    C.  482. 
Cause.     Man's   cause  —  what   other  can   we   have   at   heart  ? 

Geo.  B.D.G:  321.     C.  962. 
Externe,  Xot  inmost,  is   the    Cause,  fool  !     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  337. 

C.  968. 
Caution,     calm  sits  Caution,  rapt  with  heavenward  eye,  A  true 

confessors  gaze.     R.  and  B.  3  :27.     C.  425. 
Cavern.     A  cavern's   ostentatious   vacancy.      Red  Cott.  5 : 9. 

C.  740. 
Ceiling.     Is  it  the  ceiling  only  wants  your  soul,  Is  worth  your 

eyes  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  433.     C.  584. 
Cencini.     To  this  Cencini's  care  I  owe  the  Book.     R.  and  B. 

3:463.     C.  596. 
Censures.     How  it  disgusts  when  weakness,  false-refined.  Cen- 
sures the  honest  rude  effective  strength.    R.  and  B.  3  :  342. 

C.  549. 
Chagrin.     Palmg  and  ever  paling.  As  the  way  is  with  a  hid 

chagrin.     Flight  2  :  294.     C.  273. 
Chain,     the  so-heavv  chain  which  galled  mankind  Is  shattered. 

Para.  1:83.     C.34. 
of  this  natural  consequence  Did  just  the  last  link  of  the  long 

chain  snap.     R.  and  B.  3  :  96.     C.  452. 
Chains.     He  who  first  made  us  feel  what  chains  we  wore,  He 

also  strikes  the  blow  that  shatters  them.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :346. 

C.  293. 
Chairs.     Nice    stuffed   chairs.    And    sj-mpathetic    sideboards. 

Sludcie  4  :  224.     C.  398. 
Champaign.     The  champaign  with  its  endless  fleece  Of  feath- 
ery grasses  everywhere  !     Tico  in  C.  2  :  71.     C.  189. 
Champion.     Here   is   earth's  noblest,  nobly  garlanded  —  Her 

bravest  champion  with   his  well-won  prize.     Para.  1:102. 

C.  41. 
While  God's  champion  lives.  Wrong  shall  be  resisted:  dead, 

why,  he  forgives.     Before  2  :87.     C.  194. 
Championship,     such  championsliip  Of  God  at  first  blush,  such 
^prompt  cheery  thud  Of  glove.     R.  and  B.  3  : 381.     C.  564. 
Now  shall  the  honest  championship  of  right,  Crowned  with 

success,  enjoy  at  last,  uublamed,  Moderate  triumph !     R.  and 

.6.3:467.     C.  597. 


CHANCE  — CHANGED  29 

Chance.     Oh,   uot   aloue  when   life  flows  still,  do  truth   And 

power  emerge,  but   also  wheu  strange  chance   Ruffles    its 

current.     Para.  1 :  44.     C.  19. 
a  ruthful  chance  bi-oke  woof  and  warp.     5or.  1:208.     C.  81. 
All   men  should   pause,  misdoubt   their  strength,  since  men 

Can  have  such  chance  jet  fail  so  signally.     Colomhe  2  :  227. 

C.  249. 
—  now,  the  chance,  Now,  the  resplendent  minute !     R.  and  B. 

3 : 102.     C.  454. 
One  might  wait  years  And  never  find  the  chance  which  now 

finds  me  !     R.  and  B.  3  :281.     C.  52G. 
What  I  call  God's  hand,  —  you,  perhaps  —  mere  chance.     R. 

and  B.  3 -All.     C.  599. 
In  heaven,  perhaps,  new  chances,  one  more  chance.     Andrea 

4  :  88.     C.  348. 
But   then   I  set   my  life   upon  one  chance.     In  a  B.  4::  142. 

C.  3G8. 
Chances.    Chokef  uU  of  chances,  changes,  every  one  No  whit  less 

wondrous.     Ger.  de  L.  G  :  345.     C.  971. 
Change.     But  't  is  a  change,  and  I  detest  all  change.  And  most 

a  change  in  aught  I  loved  long  since.     Para.  1:62.     C.  20. 
such  a  dream-like  change  Of  fortune —change  abrupt,  pro- 
found, complete  ?     Colomhe  2  :  204.     C.  240. 
uo  change   Here,  though  all   else  changed    in    the  changing 

world  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  269.     C.  521. 
Kejoice  that  man  is  hurled  From  change  to  change  unceas- 
ingly,   His    soul's   wings   never    furled  !      /.   Lee   4 :  160. 

C.  375. 
What,  have  fear  of  change  from  Thee  who  art  ever  the  same  ? 

Abt  V.  4  :  184.     C.  383. 
All 's  change  but  permanence  as  well.    Fijine  4  :  439.     C.  733. 
O   sudden   change,   as    if   my  arid   clay  Burst   into   bloom  ! 

J'ocA.6:228.     C.  925. 
change  comes  —  how  To  royalty  born  with  crown  on  brow  ? 

Reioh.  6  :  432 ;  7 :  96.     C.  1004. 
Chance  cannot  change  my  love,  nor  time  impair.     Any  Wife 

2:69.     C.  188. 
Why  do  things  change?     Wherefore    is   Rome    un-Romed  ? 

R.  and  B.  3  :  410.     C.  575. 
Why  should  things  change  because  men  disbelieve?    R.  and  B. 

3:417.     C.  578. 
Since  all  things  suffer  change  save  God  the  Truth.    Death  in  D. 

4:201.      C.  389. 
Changes,     something  changes  in  the   friendly  eyes  That  love 

and  look   on  you  ...  so  slight,  so  slight  .  .  .  Luria  2  :382. 

C.  307. 
Changed.     A  little  changed,  good  man,  a  little  changed!     R. 

and  B.  Z  :2.S1.     C.  526. 


30  CHANGED  — CHEMIST 

Changed.     Ab,  Love,  but  a  day  Aud  the  world  Las  changed  ! 

J.  Lee  4  :  153.     C.  373. 
Changeless.     Unmauued,  remauned:  I  hold  it  probable  —  With 

f^omethiug  changeless  at  the  heart  of  me.    R.  and  B.  3  :  456. 

C.  593. 
Channel.     Presume   not   to  serve  God  apart   from  such   Ap- 
pointed channel  as  he  wills.     Para.  1:34.     C.  15. 
Chapel.     Out  of  the  little  chapel  I  burst  Into  the  fresh  night- 
air  again.     Chris.-Eve  4:1.     C.  31G. 
Charity.  —  persuade   the  mocking  world   Mere  charity  boiled 

over  in  this  sort!     R.  and  B.  3  :  86.     C.  448. 
Concede   him   then    the    color   charity   Casts  on  a    doubtful 

course.     R.  and  B.  3  :  169.     C.  481. 
Charles.     King  Charles,  and  who  '11  do  him  right  now?     Give 

2:2.     C.  163. 
Give   a   rouse:  here's,   in  hell's  despite  now,  King  Charles! 

Give  2:2.     C.  163. 
Charm,    put  forth  each  charm  And  proper  floweret  of  femiuitv. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  326.     C.  543. 
Chattel.     I  was  the  chattel  that  had  caused  a  crime.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  248.     C.  513. 
Cheat.     I   mean   to   change   my    trade    and   cheat    no   more. 

Sludge  4  :  223.     C.  398. 
Cheated.    "  We  are  cheated  !  "    Such  unprofitable  noise  Angers 

at  all  times.     R.  and  B.  3  :  118.     C.  461. 
First  cheated  in  his  wife,  robbed  by  her  kin,  Rendered  anon 

the  laughing-stock  o'  the  world.  R.  and  B.  3  :  139.     C.  469. 
Cheating,     in   such   womankind  -  pursuit,   Cheating   is   lawful 

chase.     Red  Cott.  5  :  33.     C.  748. 
Check,     't  is  the  check  that  gives  the  leap  its  lift.     Red  Cott. 

5:3.     C.  737. 
Cheek.     How   the  blood   lies  upon   her  cheek,  outspread  As 

thinned  by  kisses  !     Pau.  1 :  22.     C.  10. 
How  the  blood  lies  upon  her  cheek,  all  spread  As  thinned  by 

kisses!     Pau.  1:22.* 
Cheek  meeting  jowl  as  apple  may  touch  pear  From  branch 

and  branch  contiguous  in  the  wind.  R.  and  B.  3  :  335.  C.  546. 
the  simple  cult  Of  Edom's  children  wisely  bids   them  turn 

Cheek.     Joch.  6  :  223.     C.  923. 
When  my  lips  just  touched  your  cheek  —  Touch  which  let  my 

soul  come  through?     Epil.  Pillar  6  :271.     C.  942. 
Cheer.     Hails  heavenly  cheer  or  infernal  laughter  Our  first  step 

out  of  tlie  gulf  or  in  it?     Old  Pict.  2  :  40.     C.  177. 
Cheese,      cheese  at  last  I  know  from  chalk  !      Pietro  6  :  179. 

C.  905. 
Chemist,     the  delight  .  .  .  which  crowns  the  chemist  when  he 

winds  Thread   up    and   up,   till    clue   be    fairly  clutched. 

Fijine  4  :  429.     C.  728. 


CHERUB  — CHRISTIAN  31 

Cherub,     the  cherub  at  the  top  That  points  to  God  with  his 

paired  half-moon  wings.     Trans.  4  :  58.     C.  33G. 
Child.     'Tis   in   a    child,  man   and  wife    grow  complete,  One 

flesh:  God  says  so  :  let  him  do  his  work  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  71. 

C.  442. 
The  baby-softness  of  my  first-born  child  —  The  child  I  had 

died  to  see  though  iu  a  dream.     R.  and  B.  3  :  17G.     C.  484. 
To  a  child,  the  sea  is  angry,  for  it  roars:  Frost  bites,  else  why 

the  tooth-like  fret  on  face  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  387.     C.  oGG. 
Child's-carelessness.     How  should  child's-carelessness  prove 

manhood's  crime.     Druses  2  :  111.     C.  203. 
Childe  Roland.      And  blew  "  Childe  Roland  to  the  Dark  Tower 

came."     Childe  R.  2  :  336.     C.  289. 
Childishness.     I  judge  his  childishness  the  mere   relapse  To 

boyhood  of  a  man  who  has  worked  lately,  And  presently 

will  work,  so,  meantime,  plays.     Luria  2  :370.     C.  302. 
Chimaera.     And  name  the  brute,  Chimsera  which  I  slew !     R. 

and  B.  3 -.4:28.     C.  582. 
Chime.     So  old  a  chime,  the  bells  ring  of  themselves  !     R.  and 

B.  3 : 292.     C.  530. 

Chirograph,     with  his  particular  chirograph,  His  own   no  such 

infii-m  hand.     R.  and  B.3:d.     C.  417. 
Chit,     chit  Who,  aping  wisdom  all  beyond  his  years.  Thinks  to 

discard  humanity  itself .     i^o »u7^  G  :  248.     C.  932. 
Chivalry.     In  lamps  of  love  and  faith,  the  chivalry  That  dares 

the  right.     R.  and  B.  3  :  381.     C.  5G3. 
Choice,     tool    Long  or  tool    short,  .  .  .  Poor  slain    folk    find 

small  comfort  iu  the  choice  !     it.  and  B.  3  :305.     C.  535. 
Life's   business   being  just   the    terrible   choice.      R.  and  B. 

3:383.     C.  5G4. 
Chooses,     each  chooses,  none  gainsays  The  fancy  of  his  fellow, 

a  paradise  for  him,  A  hell  for  all   beside.     Fijine  4 :  403. 

C.  713. 

Chrism.      Shows  •  .  .  sufficient   chrism  .  .  .  To   neutralize   a 

blood-stain.     R.  and  B.3:7.     C.  417. 
Christ,     he  dipt  His  top-hair  and  thus  far  affected  Christ.     R. 

and  B.  3:115.     C.  459. 
not  by  the  grandeur,  God  —  But  the  comfort,  Christ.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  235.     C.  508. 

we  must  love.  And  what  we  love  most,  power  and  love  in  one, 

Let  us  acknowledge  on  the  record  here.  Accepting  these  iu 

Christ.     Death  in  D.  4  :  199.     C.  389. 
Christian.     Absent!     He  was  —  whv,  where  should  Christian 

be  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  287.     C.  528. " 
I  think  I  never  was  at  anv  time  A  Christian,  as  you  nickname 

all  the  world.     R.  and  B.  3  :  44G.     C.  589. 
How  very  hard  it  is  to  be  A  Christian.      Eas.-Day  4 :  31. 

C.  327. 


32  CHRISTIANS  — CHURCH 

Christians.    You  are  Christians  ;  somehow,  no  one  ever  plucked 

A  rag,  even,  from  the  bofly  of  the  Lord,  To  wear  and  mock 

with,  but,  despite  himself.  He  looked  the  greater  and  was 

the  better.     R.  and  B.  4  :  193.     C.  491. 
These  are  the  Christians  not  the  worldlings,  not  The  scejitics, 

who  thus  battle  for  the  faith!     R.  and  B.  3  :  389.     C.  5(3(3. 
You,  Christians  both?     I  say,  if  ever  was  such  faith  at  all 

...  'T  is  dead  of  age,  now,  ludicrously  dead.     R.  and  B. 

3:416.     C.  577. 
Nay,  call  yourselves,  if  the  calling  pleases  you,  "  Christians." 

Chris. -Eve  4  :  26.     C.  325. 
Christian  Art.     those  portents  which  impart  Such  unction  to 

true  Christian  Art.     Chris.-Eve  4  :  16.     C.  321. 
Christianity.     But,  lo,  I  wave  wand,  make  the  false  the  true  ! 

Here's  Rome  believes  in  Christianity!     R.  and  B.  3 'An. 

C. 578. 
This  Christianity,  this  lake.  This  reservoir,  whereat  we  slake, 

.  .  .  our  thirst?     Chris.-Eve  4  :  20.     C.  323. 
Chronicle.     The  chronicle  o'  the  converse  from  its  rise  To  cul- 
mination in  this  outrage  :  read  !    R.  and  B.  3  :  129.    C.  465. 
What   legendary  's  worth   a   chronicle  ?     Dan.  Bar.   6  :  303. 

C.  955. 
Chuckle.     I  suck  in  Tliat  homage,  chuckle  o'er  that  admira- 
tion. And  then  dismiss  the  fool.     Para.  1 :  94.     C.  38. 
safe  we  chuckle,  —  under  breath,  Yet  all  the  slyer,  the  jocoser. 

St.  Mart,  b -.m^.     C.  815. 
Church,    their  own  ever-craving  liege,  the  Church,   Who  li- 
censes all  crimes  that  pay  her  thus.    Druses  2  :  100.     C.  199. 
Is  't  so  sure  God's  church  lives  by  a  King's  investiture  ?     Sor. 

1:287.     C.  112. 
No  getting  again  what  the  church  has  grasped  !     Old  Pict. 

2  :  42.     C.  177. 
he  slips  from  .  .  .  Your  power,  the  temporal,  slides  inside  the 

robe  Of  mother  Church.     R.  and  B.'6:l.     C.  417. 
And  it  tells  Against  the  Church,  no  doubt,  —  another  gird  At 

the  Temporality.     R.  and  B.  3  :  10.    C.  418. 
Clean  for  the  Church  and  dead  against  the  world.  The  flesh 

and   the   devil,   does   it   tell  for  once.      R.  and   B.  3  :  11. 

C.  418. 
Such    are   the   red-clothed   milk-swollen    poppy-heads    That 

stand  and  stiffen  'mid  the  wheat  o'  the  Church  !     R.  and  B. 

3:54.     C.  435. 
Noble,  I  recognized  my  nobler  still,  The  Church,  my  suzerain; 

no  mock-mistress,  she.     R.  and  B.  3  :  146.     C.  472. 
Church  .  .  .  Pav  court  to  her,  she  stops  impertinence.     Red 

Cott.  5  :  22.     C.  744. 
Thou  none-excluding,  all-collecting  Church.     Red  Cott.  5  :  23. 

C.  745. 


CHURCH  — CLAMMY  33 

Church.     I  go  to  church  at  times,  Say  the  creed  my  mother 

taught  me  !  Many  years  in  foreign  climes  Rub  some  marks 

away.     Clive  G  :  163.     C.  897. 
A  pretty  cliurch,  I  say  no  word  against,  Yet  strauger-like. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  237.     C.  508. 
Engaged  in  visiting  his  proper  church.  The  duty  of  us  all  at 

Christmas-time.     R.  and  B.  3  :  287.     C.  528. 
Churchmen,     the  low-lying  pasture-place   Where   churchmen 

graze,  recline  and  ruminate.     R.  and  B.  3  :  148.     C.  473. 
Chyme.     No  gobbets  but  smooth  comfortable  chyme  Secreted 

from  each  snajiped-up  crudity.     R.  and  B.  3  :322.      C.  541. 
Cicala,     no  other  tune  From  tlie  cicala  perched  at  the  tree-top 

Than   crickets  noisy  round   the  root.      R.  and  B.  3  :  443. 

C.  588. 
Cicala's.     Creaked  like  the  implacable  cicala's  cry  And  made 

one's  ear-drum  ache.    R.  and  B.  3  :  75.     C.  443. 
Cinders,      once    quenclied,  they  learn  —  Cinders  do,  to  what 

dust  they  moulder  while  they  burn!    Ned  B.  6  :  14G.    C.  889. 
Circle,     the  petty  circle  lotted  out  Of  infinite  space.      Para. 

1:71.     C.  29. 
Circumscribe.     There  's  the  fault!     We  circumscribe  omnipo- 
tence.    Pillar  G  :  270.     C.  941. 
Circumstance,     growth  of  circumstance  athwart  the  life   O' 

the  natural  man.     R.  and  B.  3  :331.     C.  544. 
I  find  him  bound,  then,  to  begin  life  well;  Fortified  by  propi- 
tious circumstance.     R.  and  B.  3  :  366.     C.  558. 
The  courtly  name  and  pride  of  circumstance.    In  a  B.4i:  132. 

C.  364. 
Circumstantially.     Thus  circumstantially  evolve  we  facts.    R. 

and  B.  3  :  282.     C.  526. 
City-square.     Oh,  a  day  in  the   city-square,  there  is   no  such 

pleasure  in  life!      Up  —  Down  2  :34.     C.  175. 
Cities,     withdrawn  From  cities  where  a  whisper  breeds  offence. 

Two  Poets  6  :  83.     C.  861. 
Cits.     The  cits  enough,  with  stomach  to  be  more.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  152.     C.  474. 
Civility.     Civility  menaced   throughout  Christendom    By   too 

harsh    measiu-e    dealt    her    champion.      R.    and    B.    3:7. 

C.  417. 
Civilization.     Civilization  bows  to  decency.    R.  and  B.  3  :  295. 

C.  531. 
Claim.      —  whate'er    inheritance,   Actual  on  earth,  in  heaven 

prospective,   be  your  boast.  Lay  claim  to  !     Fijine  'i-.i^lo. 

C.  720. 
Loving  !  what  claim  to  love  has  work  of  mine  ?     E2)il.  Bean- 

St.  6:282.     C.  946. 
Clammy.     Clammy  squares  which  sweat  As  if  the  corpse  they 

keep  were  oozing  through.     St.  Prax.  4  :  91.     C.  349. 


34  CLAPPED  — CLOTHED 

Clapped.     Wlicrcas  yoii   and  I,  Being  wise  with  after-wit,  had 

chipiicd  our  hands.     A',  and  B.  3  :38.     C.  429. 
Clarity.     Belter  the;  very  clarity  of  heaven  :  The  soft  streaks 

are  the  beautiful  and'dear.     R.  and  B.  ^  ■.^'d\l.     C.  5G8. 
Clasp.     O  tliou  soul  of  my  soul  !    I  shall  clasp  thee  again,  And 

with  (iod  be  the  rest !     Prospice  4  :21G.     C.  395. 
Class,     tlie  regal  class  Nature  has  broadly  severed  from  her 

mass  Of  men.     Sor.  1:201.     C.  79. 
Claus.     Which  Chius  of  Innsbruck  cast  in  bronze  for  me  !    il/^/ 

Last  I).  2 -.'IS L     C.  252. 
Clean-handed,     folk  clean-handed  simply  recognize  Treasure 

whereof  the;  mere  sight  satisfies.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  333.     C.  9GG. 
Clearness.     (lod's  intimations  rather  fail  In  clearness  than  in 

energy.     Para.  1:75.     C.  30. 
Clericality.     Once  the  word  "  clericality "  let  fall,  Procedure 

stopped.     It  and  B.  3:7.     C  417. 
Cleverness.     Certain,  with  but  these  two  gifts,  to  gain  earth's 

prize  in  time  !     Cleverness  uncurbed  by  conscience.     Pietro 

() :  180.     C.  905. 
Cliffs.     Cliffs,  an  earthquake  suffered  jut  In  the  mid-sea.     Sor. 

1 :  198.     C.  76. 
Climbed,     one  mind  has  climbed  Step  after  step,  by  just  as- 
cent sublimed.     Sor.  1:297.     C.  115. 
People  climbed  up  the   columns,  fought   for  spikes   O'  the 

chapel-rail   to  perch  themselves  upon.      R.  and  B.  3:35. 

C.  428. 
You  surmised,  when  you  climbed  hither.  Just  as  easy  were  re- 
treat Should  you  tire.     Crist,  and  M.  G  :  204.     C.  915, 
Clive.     I 'm  no  Clive,  nor  parson  either:  Clive's  worst  deed  — 

we  '11  hope  condoned.     Clive  6  :  1G3.      C.  897. 
Clock,    the  year's  clock  whereof  the  hours  are  days.    R.  and  B. 

3  :  103.     C.  455. 
Clod.     Try  the  clod  ere  test  the  star!     Rev.  6:435  ;  7:103. 

C.  1005. 
Close.     Oh  what  a  drear  dark  close  to  my  poor  day  !     Pippa 

1:3GG.     C.  144. 
let  but  some  assurance  beam,  some  close  To  my  toil   grow 

visible,  and  I  proceed  At  any  price,  though  closing  it,  I  die. 

Para  1 :  47.     C.  20. 
Come  close  to  me,  dear  friends  ;  still  closer  ;  thus  !     Para. 

1:27.     C.  12. 
Closer.     Closer  Ave  tread  for  a  common  tether.     Epil.  Milirah 

G  :  257.     C.  93G. 
Closets.     Such  closets  to  search,   such  alcoves  to  importune  ! 

Zoye  m  i.  2  :  80.     C.  191. 
Clothed.     Who  pluck  this  flower  o'  the  field,  no  Solomon  W^as 

ever  clothed  iu  glorious  gold  to  match.     R.  and  B.  3  :  281. 

C.  626. 


CLOUD  — COMFORT  35 

Cloud,     yon  hanging  city,  in  the  sun,  Of  shapely  cloud.     Luria 
2 : 384.     C.  308. 
Sun-sufFused,  A  cloud  may  soothe  the  eye  made  blind  by  blaze. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  392.     C.  .^68. 
edifice  of  cloud  ...  —  built  about  some  glory  of  the  west, 

To  barricade  the  sun's  departure.     Fijine  4  :430.     C.  728. 
the  menace  of  a  cloud  Has  solemnized  the  sparkling.     Ari.  A. 

5:11G.     C.  G3.5. 
With  such  effect  as  when  a  cloud  enwraps  The  moon  and, 
moon-suffused,  plays  moon.     Dan.  Bar.  5  :  310.     C.  9.j8. 
Clouds.    Clouds,  the  irreyocable  trayellers.    S'o?-.  1:243.    C.  94. 
Clue.     But  I,  a  mere  man,  fear  to  quit  Tlie  clue  God  gave  me 

as  most  fit  To  guide.     Chris.-Ece  4  :  15.     C.  321. 
Cobs"wan.     Outsoar  them,  cobswan  of  the  silyer  flock  !    Sing 

well  !     Sor.  1  :  23G.     C.  92. 
Cockatrice.     Crest  oyer  crest  crowning  the  cockatrice,  That 
beggar  hell's  regalia  to  enrich.     R.  and  B.  3  :o.     C.  41G. 
That  pure  smooth  egg  which,  laid  within  ni}-  nest,  .  .  .  Issues 
a  cockatrice  for  me  and  mine.     R.  and  B.  3  :  157.     C.  477. 
Cockerel.     The  tall  wight  stands   a-tiptoe,  striyes  and  strains. 
Both  eves  shut,  like  the  cockerel  that  would  crow.      R.  a>id 

B.  3  :  27.     C.  425. 

Coin,     each  palm  well  crossed  with  coin,  And  nothing  like  a 

smutch  perceptible.     Red  Cott.  5  :  71.     C.  7G3. 
Cold.     But  why  must  cold  spread  ?  but  wherefore  bring  change 
To  the  spirit,  God  meant  shoiild  mate  his.     J.  Lee  4  :  155. 
,         C.  373. 

I  knew  it  !  from  the  first  I  knew  it !     Xever  was  so  cold  a 

heart!     Struf.  l:lol.     C.  58. 
Out  went  my  heart's  new  fire  and  left  it  cold.      Childe  R. 

2:333.     C.  287. 
Yet  it  is  better,  this  cold  certain  way.    Luria  2  :  377.     C.  305. 
He  meets  the  first  cold  sprinkle  of  the  world,  And  shudders 
to  the  marrow.     R.  and  B.  3  :  389.     C.  566. 
Colly.     Colly  my  cow  !      Don't  fidget.  Cardinal  !     R.  and  B. 

3  :  41G.     C.  o77. 
Colocynth.    the  daily  colocynth  Tickles  the  palate  by  repeated 

dose.     R.  and  B.'^S  :  348^     C.  551. 
Come.     Each  of  us  heard  clang  God's  "  Come  !  "  and  each  was 
coming  :  Soldiers  all,  to  forward-face.     Epil.  Fer.  6  :  283. 

C.  94G. 

Comes.    She  sits  up,  she  lies  down,  she  comes  and  goes,  Kneels 

at  the  conch-side.     R.  and  B.  3  :432.     C.  584. 
Comely.     The  fact  is  you  are  forty-fiye  years  old,  Xor  very 

comely  eyen  for  that  age.     R.  and  B.  3  :  156.     C.  476. 
Comfort.     They  tried  what  they  called  comfort,  "  touched  the 

quick  Of  the  ulceration  in  his  soul,"  he  said.    Balau.  4 :311. 

C.  621. 


36  COMIC  MUSE  — COMPROMISE 

Comic  Muse.     Comic   IMuse,    She    who   evolves    superiority, 

Tiiunqjh  and  joy  from  sorrow.     Ari.  A.  5:130.     C.  640. 
Comminatory.     It  reads  efficient,  now,  comniiuatory,  A  terror 

to  the  wicked.     It.  and  B.  3  :  187.     C.  489. 
Common.    I  stand  up  for  the  common  coarse-as-clay  Existence. 

.'In.  ^.  5:1G0.     C.  652. 
Down  to  the  level  of  our  common  life.  Close  to  the  beating  of 

our  common  heart.     Ay-i.  A.  5  :237.     C.  680. 
No  common  object  but  his  eye  At  once  involved  with  alien 

glow — His   own   soul's   iris-bow.      Prol.  A.  6:389;   7:1. 

C.  987. 
Common  Sense,     lest  you  force  me  to  concede  That  common 

sense  yet  lives  upon  the  world  !     Para.  1:67.     C.  27. 
The  staple  of  his  verses,  common  sense:  He  built  on  man's 

broad  nature.     Sor.  1 :  227.     C.  88. 
To  sober  us,  flustered  with  frothy  talk.  And  teach  our  com- 
mon sense  its  helplessness.     R.  and  B.  3  :  25.     C.  424. 
a  friend  ...  fit  For  counsel.  Common  Sense,  to  wit.     Eas.- 

Day  4:41.     C.  330. 
Huntsman  Commonseuse  Came  to  the  rescue.     Fijine  4t  ■A12. 

C.  718. 
Commonplace.     The  commonplace  Still  clung  about  his  heart. 

Fijitie  4  :  425.     C.  725. 
Calm  commonplace  wliich  neither  missed,  nor  hit  Inch-high, 

inch-low,  the  jjlacid   mark   proposed.      Chris.  Sm.  6  :  313. 

C.  959. 
Commotion,     first  commotion  in  subsidence  gives  The  curd  o' 

the  cream,  flower  o'  the  wheat.     R.  and  B.  3  :  21.      C.  423. 
Compassion.     No,  birth   and   breeding,   and   compassion  too 

Saved  her  such  scandal.     R.  and  B.  3  :  47.     C.  433. 
Compensates.     At   the   end,    God,    I   conclude,  compensates, 

punishes.     Andrea  ^-.^G.     C.  347. 
Defect  somewhere  compensates  for  success.  Every  one  knows 

that.     Sludge  ^-.200.     C.  409. 
Complaint.     A   perfect   goose-yard  cackle  of   complaint   Be- 
cause I  do  not  gild  the  geese  their  oats.     R.  and  B.  3  :  430. 

C.  583. 
Completed,     in  completed  man  begins  anew  A  tendency  to 

God.     Prtra.  1:119.     C.  47. 
Composure.     And  the  earth  keeps  up  her  terrible  composure. 

Before  2  :  86.     C.  193. 
Comprehend.     Why  strive  to  make  men  hear,  feel,  fret  them- 
selves With  wi'.at  't  is  past  their  power  to  comprehend  ? 

Para.  1:66.     C.  27. 
I  review  And  comprehend  much  and  imagine  more.     R.  and 

/>'.  3:251.     C.  514. 
Compromise.     But  grant  the  medium  measure  of  a  man,  The 

usual  compromise  'twixt  fool  and  sage.     R.  and  B.  3  :  445. 

C.  589. 


COMPUNCTIOUS  —  CONSCIOUSNESS  37 

Compunctious.  Unvisited  by  one  compunctious  dream  Dur- 
ing sin's  drunken  slumbex-.     Inn  ^ .  5  :  28-1.     C.  789. 

Conceit,     since  naught  cures  Conceit  but  truth,  truth  's  at  your 
service  !     Tico  Poets  6  :  96.     C.  800. 
faulty  in  the  head  Not  heait  of  him :  conceit 's  a  venial  crime. 
Two  Poets  6  :  96.     C.  800. 

Conception.  Man's  every-day  conception  of  himself.  Sun 
0  :  251.     C.  934. 

Confessing.  Woman,  confessing  crime  is  healthy  work,  And 
telling  truth  relieves  a  liar  like  you.  R.  and  B.  3  :  81. 
C.  440. 

Confession,     survives,  we  '11  hope.    To  somewhat  purify  her 
putrid  soul  By  full  confession.     R.  and  B.  3  :  Go.     C.  440. 
Confession   of   the   moribund   is    true  !      R.  and  B.  3  :  139. 
C.  409. 

Confessor,  that  poor  old  bit  of  battered  brass  Beaten  out  of 
all  shape  by  the  world's  sins,  Common  utensil  of  the  lazar- 
house  — Confessor  Celestino.     R.  and  B.  3  :8G.     C.  448. 

Confidence.  Confidence  lit  swift  the  forehead  up.  And  locked 
the  mouth  fast,  like  a  castle  braved.    Pict.  Ig.i  :  73.    C.  341. 

Confirmatory,  all  the  while  they  gird,  Turns  eye  up,  gives 
confirmatory  groan.     R.  and  B.  3  :  444.     C.  589. 

Confused.  To  hear  the  rabble  and  brabble,  you  'd  call  the  case 
Fused  and  confused  past  human  finding  out.  R.  and  B. 
3  :  100.     C.  450. 

Confusion.  So,  when  the  horrible  confusion  loosed  Its  wrap- 
page round  his  senses.      Ttco  Poets  0  :  84.     C.  802. 

Conjecture,  conjecture.  From  one  phrase  trilled  deftly,  All 
the  piece.     Flute-M.  G -A-Ii;  7:81.    C.  1001. 

Conned,     turn  the  leaf  Thoroughly  conned.    Sor.  1:228.    C.  88. 

Conqueror,  beneath  the  foot  Of  the  up-borne  exulting  Con- 
queror.    Imp.  Aug.  0:428;  7:88.     C.  1002. 

Conscience,     the  great  beacon-light  God  sets  in  all,  The  con- 
science of  each  bosom.     Straf.  1:178.     C.  08. 
the  first   conscience,   the   anterior   right,   The    God's-gift  to 

mankind.     R.  and  B.  3  :  177.     C.  485. 
—  Whom  do  you  count  the  worst  man  upon  earth  ?     Be  sure, 
he  knows,  in  his  conscience,  more  Of  what  right  is,  than 
arrives  at  birth  In  the  best  man's  acts.     Chris.-Eue  -kyl-ii. 
C.  324. 
Commend   me   to   conscience  !      Idle   stuff  !      Worst  4  :  172. 

C.  379. 
Though  conscience  in  you  were  too  vain  a  claim.      Inn  A. 

5  :  295.     C.  794. 
Rid  yourself  of  conscience,  quick  yon  have  at  beck  and  call 
the  fond  herd.     Pietro  0  :  177.     C.  904. 

Consciousness.  Call  consciousness  the  soul  —  some  name  we 
need.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  336.     C.  908. 


38  CONSEQUENCE  — CONVICTION 

Consequence,    the  ill  consequence  Of  being  noble,  poor  and 

dirtJcult,  Ungainly,  yet  too  great  to  disregard.     R.  and  B. 

13 :  8<J.     C.  449. 
Conservator.     A  conservator,  call   me,  if  you  please,  Not  a 

creator  nor  destroyer.     Prince  II.  4  :  338.     C.  684, 
Considerate,     considerate   For   frailty,  patient   in  a  naughty 

world.     R.  and  B.  3  :  78.     C.  445. 
Constancy,     being  true,  devoted,  constant  —  she  Found  con- 
stancy, devotion,  truth,  the  plain  And  easy  commonplace  of 

character.     Inn  A.  5  :2G0.     C.  780. 
Consummation.     Trial  is  over,  consummation  shines.     Luria 

2  :  387.     C.  309. 
Contempt.     Whom   vanity  nigh  slew,   contempt   shall   save  ! 

Sor.  1:293.     C.  114. 
What  I  simply  styled  Their  overlooking  me,  had  been  con- 
tempt.    King  V.  1:371.     C.  146. 
Contemptibility.     native  simple  hideousness,  Utter  contempti- 

bility.     Forc/iv.  5  :  366.     C.  820. 
Contend.     Let 's    contend    no   more.    Love,  Strive  nor  weep: 

All  be   as  before.  Love,  —  Only  sleep  !      Woman^s  2  :  22. 

C.  171. 
Let  a  man  contend  to  the  uttermost  For  his  life's  set  prize,  be 

it  what  it  will  !     Stat,  and  B.  2  :  328.     C.  286. 
Content.     Time  put  at  length  that  period  to  content.  By  right 

the  world  should  have  imposed.     Sor.  1 :  209.     C.  81. 
How  a  sound  shall  quicken  content  to  bliss,  Or  a  breath  sus- 
pend the  blood's  best  play.     By  Fire.2:Go.     C.  187. 
content  upon  his  cheek.  Despair  within  his  soul.    A  Blot  2  :  147. 

C.  218. 
With  such  content  in  everj^  snuffle,  As  the  devil  inside  us 

loves  to  ruffle.     Chris. -Eve  4, -.5.     C.  317. 
they  should  lie  down  Content  as  God  has  made  them,  nor  go 

mad  In  thriveless  cares  to  better  what  is  ill.     Para.  1  :  115. 

C.  45. 
Or,  worse  yet,  leave  weak  eyes  to  grow  sand-blind,  Content 

with  darkness  and  vacuity.     Z^ef.  6  :429;  7:90.     C.  1003. 
Conti.     Conti  is  dead,  poisoned  a  month  ago:  Does  that  much 

strike  you  as  a  sin  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  234.     C.  508. 
Contraband.     I  was  like  something   strange   or   contraband. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  246.     C.  512. 
Conversation.     By  sip  and  sip  this  drainer  to  the  dregs  O'  the 

draught  of  conversation,  —  heady  stuff.     R.  and  B.  3  :  348. 

C.  551. 
Convict.     It  should  be  always  harder  to  convict,  In  short,  than 

to  establish  innocence.     R.  and  B.  3  :  289.     C.  529. 
Conviction.      Let   me  enjoy  my  own   conviction.  Not  watch 

my    neighbor's   faith  with   fretf ulness.      Chris.-Eve  4  :  26. 

C.  325. 


COOKERY  — COUPLETS  39 

Cookery.     Tlie  smell-feasts   rouse   tliein  at  the  hint  Tiiere  '3 

cookery  in  a  certain   dwelling-place!      R.  and  B.  3:^80. 

C.  525. 
Cool-blooded.     He  's  scarce  cool-blooded  enough  for  the  right 

move  —  Does  not  shoot  when  the  game  were  sure.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  132.     C.  467. 
Co-operate,     that  my  task  was  to  co-operate  Rather  than  play 

the  rival.     Prince  H.  4  :  345.     C.  087. 
Coquetry,     the  house-front,  or  its  back  perhaps  — -  .  .  .  one 

coquetry  Of  colored  brick  and  carved  stone  !      Red  Cott. 

5  :  16.     C.  742. 
Core.     There 's   core   beneath    this    apple-rind,    Beneath    this 

■white-of-egg  there  's  yolk  !     Fil.  Bald.  5  :379.     C.  825. 
Corpse.     This  calm  corpse  with  the  loose  flowers  in  his  hand. 

^V.  1:220.     C.  85. 
Couch  beside  me  like  the  corpse  I  would  you  were  !     R.  and 

B.  3  :  270.     C.  522. 

Correggio.  And  curtaining  Correggio  carefully  Lest  I  be 
taught  that  Leda  had  two  legs.    R.  and  B.  3  :  126.     C.  464. 

Correggio's.  Correggio's  fleeting  glow  ...  he  more  than  the 
others  brings  with  him  Italy's  self.    Bishop  B.  4  :  94.     C.  .350. 

Corridors.     A  maze  of  corridors  contrived  for  sin.     Sor.  1: 202. 

C.  78. 

Corruption,     what  could  lie  beneath,  allure  Heart  of  man  to 

let  corruption  serve  man's  head  as  cynosure  ?     La  S.  6  :  73. 

C.  858. 
Corsican.     Tlie  Corsican  lieutenant  commented.  Had  I  but  one 

good  regiment  of  my  own.     Red  Cott.  5:8.     C.  739. 
Cost.     Defray  your  share  o'  the  cost,  since  you  partook  The 

entertainment !     R.  and  B.  3  :431.     C.  583. 
the  collector's  next-day  qualm  At  counting  acquisition's  cost. 

/nn  4.  5:260.     C.  780. 
as  if  it  cost  Merely  your  pushing-by  to  gain  a  post  Like  his  ! 

6V.  1:196.     C.  76. 
Cough,     his  cough,  like  a  droughty  piston,  Tried  to  dislodge 

the  husk  that  grew  to  him.     Chris.-Eve.  4  :21.     C.  323. 
Could.     No   genius   but   you   could   have  been,   no   sage.  No 

sufferer  —  which  is  grandest  —  for  the  truth  !   Inn  A.  5  :287. 

C.  790. 
Counsel.  —  you  willed  it  should  be  so  —  None  of  our  counsel, 

always  recollect !     R.  and  B.  3  :  170.     C.  482. 
Henceforth  I  asked  God  counsel,  not  mankind.     R.  and  B. 

3:256.     C.  516. 
All  prudent  counsel  as  to  what   befits  The  golden  mean,  is 

lost  on  such  an  one.     Karshish  4  :  67.     C.  339. 
Counter-thrust.     Which   leaves  me  open  to  a  connter-thrnst 

On  the  other  side.     R.  and  B.  3  :  119.     C.  461. 
Couplets,     cramp  couplets,  each  like  a  knife  in  your  entrails. 

P/>;?a  1:339.     C.  134. 


40  COURAGE  — CRAFT 

Courage,     the  courage  that  gains,  And  the  prudence  that  keeps 

what  men  strive  for.     Saul  2  :52.     C.  181. 
Oh,  have  you  only  courage  to  speak  now  ?     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  346. 

C.  293. 
—  shall  I  too  lack  courage  ? — leave  I,  too,  the  post  of  me,  like 

those  I  blame  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :38o.     C.  5G5. 
Fear — I  Avish  I  could  detect  there:  courage  fronts  me,  plain 

enough  —  Call     it    desperation,    madness.        Clive  G  :  1G3. 

C.  897. 
Course.    How  can  that  course  be  safe  which  from  the  first  Pro- 
duces carelessness  to  human  love?     Para.  1:41.     C.  17. 
pleasant  peaceful  course  prescribed  No  less  b}'  courtesy  than 

relationship.     Colnmhe  2  :  205.     C.  241. 
Court,     everybody,  if   he  'd  thrive  at  coiu-t.  Should,  first  and 

last  of  all,  look  to  himself  ?     Colomhe  2  :  182.     C.  231. 
Court-card.      Ay,   so   you  'd    play   your    last    court-card,    no 

doubt !     R.  and  B.  3  :  116.     C.  460. 
Courts.     Keep  clear  of   the   Courts  —  is  ad\ice  ad  7'em.    Ponte 

J.  6:407;  7:47.     C.  994. 
Courtship,     planned  Courtship  made  perfect.    Too  Late  ^-.ISl. 

C.  382. 
Cousin,    only,  man  and  man  Hardly  conclude  transactions  of 

the  kind  As  cousin  should  with   cousin.      Red  Cott.  5 :  65. 

C.  761. 
Cousins.     Cousins  are  an  imconscionable  kind.    Red  Cott.  5  :  19. 

C.  743. 
Covet,     He  has  talent,  not   honor  and  riches:   men  naturally 

covet  what  they  have  not.     SouVs  Tr.  2  :  357.     C.  298. 
Covrard.     You,  a  born  coward,  trv  a  coward's  arms.  Trick  and 

chicane.     R.  and  B.  3  :  130.     C.  466. 
You  shrank  from  gallant  readiness  and  risk,  Were  coward: 

the  thing  's  inexplicable  else.     R.  and  B.  3  :  1G7.      C.  480. 
Coward's.      The  little  fillip  on  the  coward's  cheek  Serves  as 

though  crab-tree  cudgel  broke  his  pate.     R.  and  B.  3  :  171. 

C.  482. 
'T  was  ever  the  coward's  curse  That  fear  breeds  fancies  in 

such:  such  take  their  shadow  for  substance  still.     Mar.  Rel. 

6  :  124.     C.  877. 
CoTvardice.     across  the  bog,  That  mire  of  cowardice  and  slush 

of  lies.     R.  and  B.  3  :395.     C.  5G9. 
Cowers,    armed  to  the  chattering  teeth.  Cowers  at  the  steadfast 

eye  and  quiet  word.     R.  and  B.  3  :371.     C.  559. 
Crack.     There  's  a  crack  somewhere,  something  that 's  unsound 

I'  the  rattle  !     R.  and  B.  3  :231.     C.  506. 
Craft,     blindfold  he  knew  the  way,  Proficient  in  all  craft  and 

stealthiijess.     R.  and  B.  3  :  92.     C.  450. 
Craft  to  the  rescue,  let  craft  supplement  Cruelty  and  show 

hell  a  masterpiece!     R.  and  B.  3  :370.     C.  559. 


CRAFT  — CRIMES  41 

Craft.     Tliis  way  is  straight ;  And  time  were  short  beside,  to 

let  nie  change   The  craft    my  childhood  learut.     In  a  B. 

4  :  147.     C.  370. 
Craft  and  trick  Are  meat  and  drink  to  Satan:  and  he  grinned 

—  How  else  ?  at  an  excuse  so  politic.    Doctor  6  :  187.    C.  908. 
Crassitude,     all  one  couch  Of  crassitude.     Red  Cott.  5 :  67. 

C.  7G2. 
Craven.     This  craven  tongue,  These  features  which  refuse  the 

soul  its  way.     SouVs  Tr.  2  :  338.     C.  289. 
Cra^wl,     Meditate  on  a  man's  immense  mistake  Who,  fashioned 

to   use  feet   and   walk,  deigns   crawl.     R.  and  B.  3 :  372. 

C.  560. 
Crazy.     Woman,  slave,  common   soldier,  artisan,  Crazy   with 

new-found   worth,   new-fangled    claims.      Ari.  A.   o :  lo5. 

C.  650. 
Credible.      'T  is  a  credible  feat  With  the  right  man  and  way. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  18.     C.  421. 
Creed,     the  hand  indeed  Which  gutted  my  purse,  would  throt- 
tle my  creed.     Holy  C.  2  :  318.     C.  282. 
Whose  life  laughs  through  and  spits  at  their  creed.     Holy  C. 

2  :  319.     C.  282. 
Creeds,     they  grow  too  great  For  narrow  creeds  of  right  and 

wrong,  which  fade  Before  the  unmeasured  thirst  for  good. 

Para.  1:119.     C.  47. 
Crescenzio.     Crescenzio,  the  Pope's  Legate  at  the  High  Coun- 
cil, Trent.     Cardinal  6  :401  ;  7:30.     C.  991. 
Cricket,     like   a  ghostly  cricket,  creaking  where  a  house  was 

burned.     Toccata  2 -.^(i.     C.  175. 
All  was  lost,  then  !    No  !  a  cricket  (What  "cicada  "  ?    Pooh  !) 

Two  Poets  Q -Al^.     C.  873. 
Crime.     Oh,  a  crime  will  do  As  well,  I  reply,  to  serve  for  a 

test.  As  a  virtue  golden  through  and  through.    Stat,  and  B. 

2  :  328.      C.  286. 
Out  of  the  man's  own  heart  a  monster  curled.  Which  crime 

coiled  with  connivancy  at  crime  —  His  victim's  breast,  he 

tells  you,  hatched  and  reared.     R.  and  B.  3  :  19.     C.  422. 
what 's  there  new  ?     Crime  will  not   fail   to  flare  up  from 

men's  hearts   While  hearts  are   men's.      R.  and  B.  3  :  70. 

C.  442. 
Has  had  undue  experience  how  much  crime  A  heart  can  hatch. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  70.     C.  442. 
Black  hard  cold  Crime  like  a  stone  you  kick  up  with  vour 

foot  I' the  middle  of  a  field  ?    R.  and  B. 'A -All.     C.  4o8. 
It  is  not  anyway  our  business   here  ...  To  prove  what  we 

thought  crime  was  crime  indeed.    R.  and  B.  3  :289.    C.  529. 
Not  in  the  by-place,  caution  may  avoid,  Wood,  cavern,  desert, 

spots  contrived  for  crime.     R.  and  B.  3  :  307.     C.  536. 
Crimes,     midmost  blotch  of  black  Discernible  in  this  group  of 


42  CRIMES  — CROWNED 

clustered   crimes  Huddling  together.      R.  and  B.  3  :  375. 
C.  561. 
Crimes.    And  clearance  of  those  errors  miscalled  crimes.    Prince 

H.  4  :  358.     C.  692. 
Critic,     the  Critic  leaves  no   air  to  poison  ;  Pumps   out  .  .  . 
leaves  3'ou  —  vacuity.     Chris.-Eve  'i::21.     C.  323. 
a  brisk  little  somebody,  Critic  and  whippersnapper,  in  a  rage 

To  set  things  right.     Bnlau.  4  :  270.     C.  605. 
—  Was  he  my  lover  ?     Call  him,  pray,  My  life's  cold  critic 
bent  on  blame.     Bad  D.  IV.  &:  398  ;  7: 23.     C.  990. 
Critic's.     Then  brightens  up  the  critic's  brow  deep-lined.     Two 

Poets  6  :  95.     C.  866. 
Critics.     We  critics  as  sweeps  out  your  chimbly  !   Pacc/i.  5  :  329. 
C.  806. 
Come,  critics,  —  not  shake  hands,  excuse  me  !     Pacch.  5  :331. 
C.  807. 
Critical,     spirit,  French  and  critical  and  cold.    Red  Colt.  5  :  27. 
C.  746. 
Who,  awe-struck,  cares  to  point  Critical  finger  at  a  dubious 
joint.     Geo.  B.  D.  G  :  324.     C.  963. 
Croisic.     Croisic,  the   spit  of  sandy  rock  which  juts  Spitefully 

northward.     Two  Poets  6  :  79.     C.  860. 
Cross,     the  Christian  act  so  possible  When  in  the  way  stood 
Nero's    cross   and   stake,  —  So  hard  now  when  the   world 
smiles  "  Right  and  wise  !  "     R.  and  B.  3  :  396.     C.  569. 
Crotchets,     why  introduce  Crotchets  like  these  ?  fine,  surely, 

but  no  use  In  poetry.     Sor.  1 :  233.     C.  90. 
Cro'wd.     I,   it   was,  faced   the   stranger-throng   beneath,  The 
crowd    with   upturned    faces,    eyes   one  stare.      R.  and  B. 
3  :  258.     C.  517. 
the  vulgar  nameless  crowd,  Innumerous  swarm  that 's  nobody 
at  all.     Imp.  Aug.  6  :  426  ;  7: 85.     C.  1002. 
CroAArn.     A  crown  's  unlike  a  sword  to  give  away.     King  C. 
1:411.     C.  162. 
There  's  many  a  crown  for  who  can  reach.     Last  Ride  2  :  280. 

C.  268. 
This  seemed  bent  somewhat  with  an  invisible  crown  Of  mar- 
tyr and  saiut,  not  such  as  art  approves.     R.  and  B.  3  :233. 
C.  507. 
Core  of  his  heart,  and  crown  completing   life.      R.  and  B. 

3  :  349.     C.  551. 
some  faint  sparkle  from   the  crown  Crowning  transcendent 

Michael,  Leonard,  Rafael.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  331.     C.  966. 
Crown,  now  — Cross,  when  ?  Imp.  Aug.  G  :  428  ;  7: 88.    C.  1002. 
Crovsnis.     where  we  looked  for  crowns  to  fall,  We  find  the  tug 's 

to  come,  —  that 's  all.     Eas.-Day  4  :  32.     C.  327. 
Cro"wned.     crowned  with  love's  best  crown,  And  feasted  with 
love's  perfect  feast.     Time's  R.  2  :  252.     C.  258. 


CROWS  — CUP  43 

Crows,     like  calm  determined  crows,  They  came   to  take  pos- 
session of  their  corpse.     Red  Cott.  5  :8o.     C.  768. 
Crozier.     BuL  who  wields  the  crozier,  down  may  fling  the  crow- 
bill.   Pietro  6  :  177.     C.  90-1. 
Cruelty,      the   unpent   sluice    of   cruelty.      R.  and  B.   3 :  84. 
C.  447. 
The  aim  o'  the  cruelty  being  so  crueller  still,  That  cruelty  al- 
most grows  compassion's  self.     R.  and  B.  3  :  1*21.     C.  4(32. 
With  cruelty  beyond  Caligula's.     R.  and  B.  3  :  156.     C.  476. 
—  such  acts   As  I  thought  just,  my  wife  called  cruelt}-.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  183.     C.  487. 
when  the  simpler  cruelty  Seemed  somewhat  dull  at  edge  and 
fit  to  bear,     R.  and  B.  3  :  253.     C.  515. 
Crumb,     for  each  a  crumb  Of  right,  for  neither  of  them  the 

whole  loaf.     R.  and  B.  3  :50.     C.  433. 
Crumbs.    Even  to  the  crumbs  I  'd  fain  eat  up  the  feast.     Gram. 

Fim.  2:^11.     C.  279. 
Crutches.     So  would  he  soon  supply  your  crippled  soul  With 
crutches,    from    his    own    intelligence.      Red    Cott.  5 :  67. 
C.  762. 
Cry.     All  of  Life  's  a  cry  just  of  weariness  and  woe.  Love  — 
«  Hear   at    least,  thou    happy   one  !  "      Epil.  Fer.   6  :  283. 
C.  946. 
Cuckoo.     The  tell-tale  cuckoo:  spring's  his  confidant,  And  he 

lets  out  her  April  purposes  !     Pippa  1 :  355.     C.  140. 
Culprit.     A  kind  of  culprit,  over-zealous  hound  Kicked  for  his 
pains  to  kennel.     R.  and  B.  3  :  191.     C.  490. 
God,  be  sure,  knows  well  The  way  to  clutch  a  culprit.     Cen- 
cktjao -.370.     C.  822. 
Culture.     That  in  this  case  the  spirit  of  culture  speaks,  Civili- 
zation is  imperative.     R.  and  B.  3  :400.     C.  571. 
in  dissociation,  more  and  more,  Man  from  his  fellow,  as  their 

lives  advance  In  culture.     Prince  H.  4  :  352.     C.  690. 
out  of  simple  came   the    composite    By  culture.      Red  Cott. 
5  :  35.     C.  749. 
Cultured,     the    cultured    class   Which   law-makes   for   itself. 

Joch.  6  :  228.     C.  925. 
Cunning.     That  mother  with  her  cunning  and  her  cant.     R. 
and  B.  3  :  428.     C.  582. 
Conquer  who  can,  the  cunning  of  the  snake  !     Inn  A.  5  :313. 
C.  801. 
Cup.     Till  one  day,  what  is  it  knocks  at  my  clenched  teeth  But 
the  cup  full,  curse-collected  all  for  me  ?    R.  and  B.  3  :  163. 
C.  479. 
The  cup,  he  quaffs  at,  lay  with  olent  breast  Open  to  gnat, 
midge,  bee  and  moth  as  well  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  327.     C.  543. 
Thou,   heaven's    consummate    cup,    what    needst    thou   with 
earth's  wheel  ?     Ben  Ezra  4  :  190.     C.  385. 


44  CURDLING  — DAGGER 

Curdling.      One's   whole   blood   grew    curdling    and    creepy. 

Glove  2  :  248.     C.  257. 
Cure,     the  slow  cure  ended  —  They  opened  the  hospital-door. 

Don.  G  :  199.     C.  913. 
Curious.     Yonder  where  curious  people  count  her  breaths,  Cal- 
culate how  long  yet  the  little  life  Uuspilt  may  serve  their 
turn.     R.  and  B.  3  :  73.     C.  443. 
Curls,      curls  Wound  to  a  ball   in   a   net   behind.       Too  Late 

4  :  181.     C.  382. 
Curly,      face  Beneath  its  garniture  of  curly  gold.     Childe  R. 

2  :  333.     C.  287. 
Curse.     Go,  take  the  curse  of  a  lost  soul,  I  say  !     Luria  2  :  390. 
C.  310. 
curse  and  counterblast.  The  devil's  self  were  sick  of  his  own 

din.     R.andB.?,:^.     C.  431. 
With  half  a  curse  and  half  a  pitving  smile.    R.  and  B.  3  :211. 

C.  498. 
I  curse  her  to  her  face  before  you  all.     Shame  hunt  her  from 

the  earth!     A  Blot  2  :  165.     C.  225. 
I'll  not  curse  —  God  bears  with  them,  well  may  I.     SouVs  Tr. 

2:343.     C.  291. 
the  restive  prophet  old  Who  came   and  tried  to  curse  but 
blessed  the  land.     Red  Cott.  5  :  18.     C.  743. 
Cursed.     So  century  re-echoed  century.  Cursed  the  accursed, 

—  and  so,  from  sire  to  son.     R.  and  B.  3  :  469.     C.  598. 
Curtain.      What,  what?      A  curtain  o'er  the  world  at  once  ! 
Co/iT/an  4: 213.     C.  394. 
Open  the  door  !      No  :  let  the  curtain  fall  !      Inn  .4.5: 315. 
C.  802. 
Custom.     Where  custom  somewhat  staled  the  spectacle,  'T  was 
not  so  well  i'  the  way,  .  .  .  beside.    R.  and  .6.  3  : 9.     C.  417. 
helped  by  custom,  habitude.  And  all  else  they  mistake   for 

finer  sense  O'  the  fact.     R.  and  B.  3  :397.     C.  570. 
unimpaired  Bv  custom  the  accloyer,  time  the  thief.      Joch. 
6:219.     C.  921. 
Cyclamen,     this  pink  perfection  of  the  cyclamen.    La  S.G:  54. 

C.  849. 
Cypress,     yon  cypress  that  points  like  death's  lean  lifted  fore- 
finger.    Up  —  Down  2  :  33.     C.  174. 


D 

Daemons.     Stay  with  the  flat-fish,  thou  !     We  like  the  upper 

range  Where  the  "  gods  "  live,  perchance  the  daemons  also 

dwell.     Fifine  4  :  412.     C.  718. 
Dagger,     the   dagger  .  .  .  Triangular  i'  tlie  blade,  a   Genoese, 

Armed  with  those  little  hook-teeth  on  the  edge.     R.  and  B. 

3:36.     C.  428. 


DAISIES  — DARWIN  45 

l^aisies.   Daisies  and  grass  be  my  heart's  bedfellows.    Ger.  de  L. 

0:353.     C.  974. 
Damnable.     That  which  was  glory  in  the  Mother  of  God  Had 

been,  for  instance,  damnable  iu   Eve.     R.  and  B.  3  :  254. 

C.  515. 
Damnation.    Utter  damnation  is  reserved  for  hell !   Para.  1 :  79. 

C.  32. 
Damnations,      text  in  Galatians,  Once  you  trip  on  it,  entails 

Twenty-nine  distinct  damnations.     Solil.  2  :  13.     C.  1G8. 
Dance.     For  why  should  men  dance  at  all  —  Why  women  .  .  , 

Unless  they  are  gay  ?     Bad  D.  II.  6  :  395  ;  7: 16.     C.  989. 
Dancer,    such  a  dancer  as  makes  doat  The  senses  when  the  soul 

is  satisfied.     Dan.  Bar.  G  :  309.     C.  958. 
Danger,     a  long  road  with  many  a  danger  rife,  Lions  by  the 

way  and  serpents  in  the  path.     R.  and  B.  3  :  333.     C.  545. 
Danger,     left   low  safety  to  timid   mates.  And  made  for  the 

dread  dear  danger.     Don.  G  :  196.     C.  912. 
Dangerous.     He  lived  Too  much  advanced  before  his  brother 

men;  They  kept  him  still  in  front:  't  was  for  their  good  But 

yet  a  dangerous  station.     Para.  1:110.     C.  44. 
Dante.     I  doubt  much  if  Marino  really  be  A  better  bard  than 

Dante  after  all.     R.  and  B.  3  :  199.     C.  493. 
Dante   once  prepared  to  paint  an  angel.      One  Word  4  :  125. 

C.  362. 
Dante,  who  loved  well  because  he  hated.  Hated  wickedness 

that  hinders  loving.     One  Word  4  :  125.     C.  362. 
Dare.     What   honest    man    should   dare    (he    said)    he   durst. 

Childe  R.  2 -.'633.     C.  288. 
And  how  should  I  dare  die,  this  man  let  live  ?      R.  and  B. 

3:403.     C.  572. 
All   now   is   possible.  Fact's   grandeur,  no   false   dreaming ! 

Dare  and  do  !     Luria  2  :  404.      C.  316, 
Who  owns  "  I  dare  not  look  on  diadems  Without  an  itch  to 

pick  out,  purloin  gems."     Fr.  Fu.  6  :333.     C.  906. 
Dares.     Know   you   the   man's   self  ?  what  he  dares  ?     Straf. 

1:132.     C.  51. 
Daring.     Give   these,  I   exhort   you,  their   guerdon  and   glory 

For  daring  so  much,  before    they  well  did  it.      Old  Pict. 

2:41.     C.  177. 
Dark,     dark,  difticidt  enough  The  human  sphere,  yet  eyes  grow 

sharp  by  use.     R.  and  B.  3  :  383.     C.  564. 
'tis  your  torch  Makes  the  place  dark:  the  darkness  let  alone 

Grows  tolerable  twilight.     R.  and  B.  3  :45i.     C.  593. 
Darkling.     I  chose  the  darkling  half,  and  wait  the  rest  In  that 

new  world  where  light  and  darkness  fuse.     Bi/ur.  5  :  347. 

C.  812. 
DarTvin.     Nay,  Darwin  tells  of  such  as  love  the  bower  —  His 

bower-birds.     Geo.  B.  D.  6  :320.     C.  961. 


46  DATE  — DEAD 

Date.     Ye  luad  brotlieis  for  inmates,  twins,  Date  and  Dabitur. 

Twins  2  :  27(5.     C.  2G0. 
Daubed.     Tlic  coarse   brush  has  daubed  —  What  room  for  the 

fine  limner's  pencil-mark  ?     Ari.  A.  5 -.llO.     C.  G56. 
Daughter,     the   daughter  of  God   knows  who.   Flight   2:291. 
C.  272. 
A  dauf^hter  with  the  mother's  hands  still  clasped  Over  her 
head  for  fillet  virginal.     R.  and  B.  3  :  76.     C.  444. 
Daughters,     daughters  sly  and  tall  And  curling  and  compliant. 

,S'or.  1:199.     C.  77. 
Da'wn.     Oh,  what  a  dawn  of  day  !     How  the  March  sun  feels 
like  May  !     Lovers'  Q.  2  :  27.     C.  172. 
All  the  dawn  promised  shall  the  day  perform.    A  Blot  2  :  156. 

C.  221. 
Shall  I  wish  back  once  more  that  thrill  of  dawn  ?     When  the 
whole   truth-touched   man  burned   up.     R.  and  B.  3 :  395. 
C.  569. 
Day.     Day  I  Faster  and  more  fast,  O'er  night's  brim,  day  boils 
at  last.     Pippa  1:327.     C.  129. 
Oh,  Day,  if  I  squander  a  wavelet  of  thee.  Pippa  1 :  327.   C.  129. 
The  moon  is  carried  off  in  purple  fire.     Day  breaks  at  last ! 

Druses  2  :  97.     C.  197. 
With  God  a  day  endures  alway,  A  thousand  years  are  but  a 

day.     Boy  and  Aug.  2  :239.     C.  254. 
the  day  .  .  .  dim  Was  settling  to  its  close,  yet  shot  one  grim 

Red  leer.     Childe  R.  2  : 331.     C.  287. 
yet  another  day  let  come  and  go,  With  pause  prelusive  still  of 

novelty.     R.  and  B.  3  :  21.     C.  423. 
the  happy  day  we  live  in,  not  the  dark  O'  the  early  rude  and 

acorn-eating  race.     R.  and  B.  3  :  295.     C.  531. 
misgivings    how   the    day  may  die,  Though  born  with    such 
auroral  brilliance.     R.  and  B.  3  :  335.     C.  546. 

0  pale  departure,  dim  disgrace  of  day!     Winter  's  in  wane, 
his  vengeful  worst  art  thou.     R.  and  B.  3  :  362.     C.  556. 

Earth's  day  is  growing  late.     Ari.  A.  5  :  165.     C.  654. 

1  know  there  shall  dawn  a  day.    Rev.  6  :434;  7: 102.    C.  1005. 
Day-star.     The    day-star   stopped  its   task   that  makes   night 

morn  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  277.     C.  524. 
Day's.     The  day's  adventures  for  the  day  suffice.     Sor.  1:207. 
C.  80. 
Mewed  from  day's  malice.     Apol.  and  F.  6  :286.     C.  949. 
Days,     days  stretched  to  years  dim  with  doubt.     Fust  G  :3n. 

C.  983. 
Dead.     Dreary  days  which  the  dead  must  spend  Down  in  their 
darkness  under  the  aisle.     Stat,  and  B.  2  :  326.     C.  285. 
what's  dead  can't  come  to  life,  I  think.     Pied  Piper  2  •.2^5. 

C.  270. 
He  is  gone  to  his  reward,  —  dead,  being  my  friend.   R.  and  B. 
3  :  182.     C.  487. 


DEAD  — DEATH  47 

Dead.     With  ghastly  smooth  life,  dead  at  heart,  Tame  in  earth's 
paddock  as  her  prize.     Eas.-Day  4  :  55.     C.  3;i.l. 
But  dead  !     All 's  done  with:  wait  who  may,  \Vatch  and  wear 

and  wonder  who  will.      Too  Late  4  :  179.     C.  381. 
Dead  !    Such  must  die  !    Could  people  comprehend  !    There  's 

the  unfairness  of  it !     Ari.  A.  5  :  136.     C.  G43. 
Ay,  dead  loves  are  the  potent !     St.  Mart.  5  :  354.     C.  815. 
Deadlier.     They  see  in  this  a  deeper  deadlier  aiuj.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  121.     C.  462. 

Thou  diest  while  I  survive?  Say  rather  that  my  fate  is  dead- 
lier still.     Cleon  4  :  121.     C.  361. 

Deafness.  Only  by  Deafness  may  the  vexed  Love  wreak  Its 
insuppressive  sense  on  brow  and  cheek.  Deaf  and  D.  4  :  210. 
C.  395. 

Dealings.  Doubtless,  out  of  date  Are  dealings  with  the  devil. 
Geo.  B.  D.6:  324.     C.  963. 

Dear.  Now  he  was  made  aware  how  dear  is  death.  How  lov- 
able the  dead  are,  how  the  heart  Yearns  in  us  to  go  hide 
where  they  repose.     Balau.  4  :310.     C.  621. 

Dearest.      You  cruellest,  you  dearest  in  the  world.      In  a  B. 

4  :  131.     C.  364. 

Dearnesses.       memories,   dearnesses   enhanced    Rather   than 

harmed  by  death.     Dan.  Bar.  6  :  310.     C.  958. 
Death.     Feeling  God  loves  us,  and  that  all  which  errs  Is  but  a 

dream  which  death  will  dissipate.     Pau.  1:24.     C.  11. 
Feeling   God   loves  us,  and   that  all   that  errs   Is  a  strange 

dream  which  death  will  dissipate.     Pau.  1:24.* 
strange  secrets  are   let   out  bv  death  Wlio  blabs  so  oft    the 

follies  of  this  world.     Para.  "'1:63.     C.  26. 
there  is  a  reason  For  what  I  sav:  I  think  the  soul  can  never 

Taste  death.     Para.  1:101.     C.  40. 
the  death  I  fly,  revealed  So  oft  a  better  life  this  life  con- 
cealed, And  which  sage,  champion,  martyr,  through   each 

path  Have  hunted  fearlessly.     Sor.  1:316.     C.  123. 
Death  stepped  tacitly  and  took  them  where  they  never  see 

the  sun.     Toccata  2  :36.     C.  175. 
How  he  lies  in  his  rights  of   a  man  !     Death  has  done  all 

death  can.     After  2  :  87.     C.  194. 
Ha,  what  avails  death  to  erase  His   offence,  my  disgrace  ? 

After  2  :  87.     C.  194. 
Death  !  —  a  fire  curls  within  us  From  the  foot's  palm,  and  fills 

np  to  the  brain,  Up,  out.     Druses  2  :  119.     C.  206. 
Death   makes   me   sure   of    him    forever !      A    Blot   2 :  176. 

C.  229. 
Death  's  to  fear  from  flame  or  steel,  Or  poison  doubtless ; 

but  from  water  —  feel !     Gondola  2  :  266.     C.  263. 
Death,  with  the  might  of  his  sunbeam.  Touches  the  flesh  and 

the  soul  awakes.     Flight  2  :  304.     C.  277. 


48  DEATH 

Death,     with  the  throttling  hands  of  death  at  strife.     Gram. 

Fun.  '2  :  312,     C.  280. 
Death   meant,  to  spurn  the  ground,  Soar  to  the  sky,  —  die 

well  and  you  do  that.     R.  and  B.  3  .-210.     C.  498. 
Let  God  save  the  innocent  !      Moreover,  death  is  far  from  a 

bad  fate.     R.  and  B.  3  :  2G0.     C.  518. 
its  simple  proper  private   way  Of   decent  self-dealt  gentle- 
manly death.     A',  and  B.  3  :  298.     C.  532. 
while  purblind  death  Mows  here,  mows  there,  makes  hay  of 

juicy  me.     R.  and  B.  3  :  407.     C.  573. 
And  death  ends  good  and  ill  and   everything  !      R.  and  B. 

3  :  421.     C.  579. 
Suppose  life  had  no  death  to  fear,  how  find  A  possibility  of 

nobleness  In  man,  prevented  daring  any  more  ?     R.  and  B. 

3  :  45G.     C.  593. 

Death  so  nigh,  When  time  must  end,  eternitv  Begin.     Eas.- 

Day  4  :  32.     C.  327. 
Aiid  the  best  we  wish  to  what  lives,  is  —  death.    Worst  4  :172. 

C.  379. 
Thou  waitedst  age  :   wait  death  nor  be  afraid  !     Ben  Ezra 

4  :  188.     C.  384. 

Let   age  approve  of   youth,   and  death  complete  the  same  ! 

Ben  Ezra  4  :  191.     C.  385. 
this  is  death  and  the  sole  death,  When  a  man's  loss  comes  to 

him  from  his  gain.     Death  in  D.  4  :  202.     C.  390. 
His  life  becomes  impossible,  which   is  death.      Death  in  D. 

4  :  204.     C.  390. 
Fear  death  ?  —  to  feel  the  fog  in  my  throat.  The  mist  in  my 

face.     Prospice4:216.     C.  395. 
Since  death  divides  the  pair,  'T  is  well  that  I  depart  and  thou 

remain  Who  was  to  me  as  spirit  is  to  ilesh.     Balau.  4  :  325. 

C. 626. 
But  how  should  Death  or  stay  or  understand  ?   Balau.  4  :  275. 

C.  607. 
Death  reads  the  title  clear  —  What  each  soul  for  itself  con- 
quered from  out  things  here.     Fifine  4  :  405.     C.  714. 
How    thoroughly    death    alters     things !       Ari.    A.    b :  110. 

C.  632. 
When  I  shall  think  to  glide  into  the  grave.  There  will  you 

wait    disguised    as     beckoning    Death.       Inn   A.   5  :  276. 

C.  786. 
Bid  with  life's  ecstasy  sense  overbrim  And  suck  back  death 

in  the  resurging  joy.     Numph.  5  :348.    C.  813. 
God  is,  and  the  soul  is,  and,  as  certain,  after  death  shall  be. 

La  S.  6  :  68.     C.  855. 
"  Till  death  us  do  part  ?  "     Till  death  us  do  join  past  parting 

—  that   sounds  like  Betrothal  indeed  !      Mar.  Rel.  6  :  122. 

C.  877. 


DEATH  — DECENTLY  49 

Death.     Deatli  is  the  strongest-born  of  Hell,  and  yet  Stronger 
than  Deatli  is  a  Bad  Wife.     Doctor  0  :  181.     C.  90G. 
Where  's  Death  ?     Know  —  I  am  he,  Satan  who  work  all  evil. 

Doctor  6  :  182.     C.  906. 
till  death  touch  his  eyes  And  show  God  granted  most,  deny- 
ing all.     Famihi  6  :''2-18.     C.  933. 
as  age  —  youth,  So  death  completes  living,  shows  life  in  its 

truth.     Apol.  and  F.  G  :  293.     C.  951. 
But  death  means  peace.     Ger.  de  L.  6  :  349.     C.  973. 
Be  death  with  me,  as  with  Achilles  erst.  Of  Man's  calamities 

the  last  and  worst.     Ger.  de  L.  6  :352.     C.  974. 
be  assiired,  come  what  come  will.  What  once  lives  never  dies 
—  what  here  attains  To  a  beginning,  has  no  end,  still  gains 
And  never  loses  aught:    when,  where,  and  how — Lies  iu 
Law's  lap.    What 's  death  then  ?    Ger.  deL.G:  352.    C.  974. 
what  is  death  but  a  sleep  ?     Rosnij  6  : 391 ;  7 : 5.     C.  987. 
Death-damp.     A  little  saucy  rose-bud  minx  can  strike  Death- 
damp  into  the  breast  of  doughty  king.     R.  mid  B.  3:426. 
C.  581. 
Death's.     Death's  stanch  purveyors,  such  as  have  in  care  To 
feast  him.     5'or.  1:195.     C.  75. 
death's  breath  rivelled  up  the  lies,  Left  bare  the  metal  thread, 
the  fibre  fine  Of  truth,  i'  the  spinning.     R.  and  B.  3  :  29. 
C.  426. 
Death's  rapid  line  had  closed  a  life's  account.    Ari.  A.  5  :  128. 

C.  640. 
So,  't  was  Death's  self  that  clipped  and  coyed  me,  Loved  — 

and  lied  !     St.  Mart.  5  :354.     C.  815. 
down  disastrouslv  have  joggled  Till  I  pitch  against  Death's 

door,  the  true  JSTec  Ultra  Flus.     Pietro  6  :  176.     C.  903. 
(So  death's  kindly  touch  informed  me  as  it  broke  the  gla- 
mour, gave  Soul  and  body  both  release  from  life's  long  night- 
mare in  the  grave).     La  S.  6  :65.     C.  854. 
Debauchery,     launched  his  youth  Lito  a  cesspool  of  debauch- 
ery.    Red  Cott.  5  :  86.     C.  769. 
Debt,     finds  himself  in  debt  at  last,  As  he  were  any  lordling  of 
us  all.     R.  and  B.  3  :  108.     C.  457. 
We  women   hate   a   debt  as  men  a  gift.      In  a  B.  i  :  138. 
C.  366. 
Decaying,     worst,  To  weep  decaying  wits  ere  the  frail  body 

Decays!     Paw.  1:14.     C.  7. 
Deceitful.      Deceitful   to    the   very  fingers'  ends  !      King   V. 

1:374.     C.  147. 
Deceived.      We   live   and    breathe   deceiving   and    deceived. 

Pflra.  1:100.     C.  40. 
Decently.     Let  him  but  decently  disembroil  himself,  Scramble 
from  out  the  scrape  nor  move  the  mud.     R.  and  B.  3  :  189. 
C.  489. 


50  DECORUM  —  DEMUR 

Decorum.     You  laid  down  law  and  rolled  decorum  out,  From 

])ul])it-coriier  on  tlie  gospel-side.    R.  and  B.  3  :  4150.     C.  585. 

Decrepitude.     Than  this  gray  ultimate  decrepitude.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  304.     C.  557. 

Deed.     Remains  alone   Tliat  word  grow  deed,  as   with  God's 

help  it  sliall.     Straf.l-A^o.     C.  52. 
Each  deed  thou  hast  done  Dies,  revives,  goes  to  work  in  the 

world.     Saul  2  :  53.     C.  182. 
Too  long  had  I  heard  Of  the  deed  proved  alone  by  the  word. 

Glove  2  :  250.     C.  257. 
Deeds,     our  deeds  so  soon  erases  Time  upon  his  tablet  where 

Life's  glory  lies  enrolled  ?     Epil.  Per.  6  :  283.     C.  946. 
'  I  require  '  .  .  .  Pure  thoughts,  ay,  but  also  fine  deeds.     Which 

6:401;  7:28.     C.  991. 
great  deeds  flashed   by  me,  fast  and  thick  As  stars   which 

storm  the  sky  on  autumn  nights.     Imp.  Aug.  6  :425;  7:84. 

C.  1001. 

Deeper.  If  we  no  longer  see  as  you  of  old,  'Tis  we  see  deeper. 
Ger.deL.G:Ml.     C.  972. 

Defeat.     Oh,  he  knows  what  defeat  means,  and  the  rest!     Him- 
self the  undefeated  that  shall  be.     /.  Lee  4  :  159.     C.  375. 
the  victory  leads  but  to  defeat.  The  gain  to  loss,  best  rise  to 
the  worst  fall.     Death  in  D.  4  :  204.     C.  390. 

Defect.  So  may  a  glory  from  defect  arise.  Deaf  and  D. 
4  :  216.     C.  395. 

Defence.  He  proffers  his  defence,  in  tones  subdued  Near  to 
mock-mildness  now.     R.  and  B.  3  :  22.     C.  423. 

Deferential.  With  deferential  duck,  slow  swing  of  head.  R. 
and  B.  3:^29.     C.  582. 

Deficiency,  drear  Deficiency  gapes  every  side!  Eas.-Day 
4  :  51.     C.  333. 

Deformed.  Deformed,  transformed,  reformed,  informed,  con- 
formed !    R.  and  B.  3  :449.     C.  591. 

Delay.  Delay  —  best  speed,  —  half  loss,  at  times,  —  whole 
gain,     iwna  2:367.     C.  301. 

Delirium.  Loses  all  guidance  from  the  reason-check:  As  in 
delirium  or  a  frenzy-fit.     R.  and  B.  3  :  292.     C.  530. 

Dellos.  A  younger  succeeds  to  an  elder  brother,  Da  Vincis  de- 
rive in  good  time  from  Dellos.     Old  Pict.  2  :38.     C.  176. 

Delusions.  As  strong  delusions  have  prevailed  ere  now. 
]\Ien  have  set  out  as  gallantly  to  seek  Their  ruin.  Para. 
1:40.     C.  17. 

Demagogue,  the  brutish  demagogue  Appointed  by  a  bestial 
nudtitnde.     Ari.  A.  5:155.     C.  650. 

Demodocus.  Demodocus  his  nugatory  song — Hath  ever 
been  concluded  modern  stufP.     R.  and  B.  3  :  339.     C.  548. 

Demur.  Demur  ?  Do  cattle  bidden  march  or  halt  ?  R.  and 
B.  3  :  377.     C.  562. 


DEROGATE  — DEVIL  51 

Derogate.  ]\Ian  Derogate,  live  for  the  low  tastes  aloue,  Mean 
creeping  cares  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  291.     C.  530. 

Desecration.  There  's  a  strange  secret  sweet  self-sacrifice  In 
any  desecration  of  one's  soul  To  a  worthy  end.      Sludge 

4  :  252.     C.  410. 

Describe.     I  never  saw  what  I  could  less  describe.     Red  Cott. 

5  :  20.     C.  744. 

Desert.     Deal    with    the    depths,    pronounce    on    my    desert 
Groundedly  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  425.     C.  581. 
the  true  means  Whereby  desert  is   crowned:  not  force  but 
wile  Came  to  the  rescue.     Two  Poets  6  :  98.     C.  8G7. 
Desert-whispers.     (Because   night  draws  on,   and   the  sands 
increase,  And   desert-whispers   grow  a  prophecv,)     Prince 
H.  4  :  331.     C.  682. 
Desire.     A  heartful  of  desire,  man's  natural  load,  A  brainful 
of  belief,  the  noble's  lot.     R.  and  B.  3  :  147.     C.  472. 
Witness  that  ardent  fancy-shape  —  I  judge  A  semblance  of 
her  soul  —  she  called,   "  Desire."      Bea.  Sig.  6  :412  ;  7:57. 
C.  996. 
Desires.     Xo  simple  and  self-evident  delights.  But  mixed  de- 
sires of  unimagined  range.     Sor.  1:210.     C.  81. 
if  he  retained  those  angelic  infantine  desires  when  he  had 
grown  six  feet  high.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :359.     C.  298. 
Despair.     How  dangerous  we  grow  in  this  extreme,  How  truly 
formidable  by  despair.     Lnria  2  :  374.     C.  304. 
I  see  the  same  stone  strength  of  white  despair.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  433.     C.  584. 
not  sorrow  but  despair,  Xot  memory  but  the  present  and  its 

pang  !     Ari.  .4.5: 99.     C.  628. 
Heaven  Which  has  not  bade  a  living  thing  despair.     A  Blot 

2  :  177.     C.  230. 
Shall  any  soul  despair  of  setting  free  again  Trait  after  trait. 

Fifine  4  :  403.     C.  713. 
leave  me   not  tied   To  tliis  despair,  tliis   corpse-like  bride  ! 
Eas.-Day  4  :  55.     C.  335. 
Despairs.     Though  sharp  despairs  Shot  through  me,  I  held  up, 
bore  on.     Eas.-Day  4  :  .50.     C.  333. 
the  worst  watch  of  the  night  gives  way,  And   there   comes 
.  .  .  The  scrutinizing  eye-point    of    some   stnr — And  who 
despairs  of  a  new  daybreak  now  ?   R.  and  B.  3  :  15.    C.  420. 
Desperate,      desperate    through   the   dark   Reeled    they   like 

drunkards  along  open  road.     it.  and  B.  3  :  104.     C.  455. 
Despised.     Soul,  body  got  and  gained,  inalienably  safe  Your 

own,  become  despised.     Fifine  4  :396.     C.  709. 
Despondency's,     lips,  firm-set  In  slow  despondency's  eternal 

sigh!     Para.  1:55.     C.  23. 
Devil,      not   the   worst  of  people's  doings   scare   The   devil. 
Pippa  1:365.     C.  144. 


52  DEVIL  — DIE 

Devil,     bow  the  devil  spends  A  fire  God  gave  for  other  ends  ! 
Time's  R.  2  :  252.     C.  258. 
this  was  hard  to  gulp  down  and  digest.     So  pays  the  devil  his 

liegeman,  brass  for  gold.     R.  and  B.  3  :  100.     C.  454. 
Note,  that  the  climax  and  the  crown  of  things  Invariably  is, 

the  devil  appears  himself.     R.  and  B.  3  :  135.     C.  408. 
The  Devil,  that  old  stager,  at  his  trick  Of  general  utility,  who 
leads  Downward,  perhaps,  but  fiddles  all  the  way  !      Red 
Con.  5  :  30.     C.  747. 
There  's  nothing  the  Devil  objects  to  so  much,  ...  as  one  of 
those   purged    Of   his   presence.      Ponte  A.  6:411;  7:55. 
C.  996. 
Devil's.     Say,  I  serve  God  at  the  devil's  bidding  —  will  that 
do?     King  C.  1:393.     C.  155. 
because  O'  the  devil's  will  to  work  his  worst  for  once.     R. 
and  B.  3 -.34:.     C.  428. 
Devils,     no  more  love-making  devils:  hence  !   R.  and  B.  3  :223. 

C.  ,503. 
Devils'-triumph.    one  more  footpath  untrod.  One  more  devils '- 

triumph  and  sorrow  for  angels.     Lost  Z.  2  : 4,     C.  164. 
Devotedness.      Voluptuousness,     grotesqueness,     ghastliness, 

Environ  my  devotedness.     Pippa  1 :  354.     C.  139. 
Devotion.      The    frantic    gesture,    the    devotion    due    From 
Thyrsis  to  Xeajra  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  157.     C.  477. 
Devotion  to  the  uttermost  is  yours,    /n  a  iJ.  4  :  150.     C.  371. 
Dew-drop.     There  's  a  woman  like  a  dew-drop,  she  's  so  purer 

than  the  purest.     A  Blot  2  :  153.     C.  220. 
Diamond,     pullet-egg  Of  diamond,  slipping  flame  from  fifty 

slants.     Red  Cott.o  :  43.     C.  752. 
Die.     The  die  was  cast:  over  shoes  over  boots.    R.  and B.  3  :55. 

C.  436. 
*  For  I  believe  we  do  not  wholly  die.     Para.  1: 101.     C.  40. 
Best  die.     Then  if  tliere  's  any  fault,  fault  too  Dies,  smoth- 
ered up.     Straf.  1:191.     C.  74. 
We  die:  .  .  .  Dismounted  wheel  by  wheel,  this  complex  gin. 

To  be  set  up  anew  el.sewhere.     Sor.  1:257.     C.  100. 
I  '11  die  for  you,  But  not  annoy  you  with  my  presence.     King 

F.  1:383.     C.  151. 
I  would  die  if  death  bequeathed  Sweet  to  him.     In  a  Year 

2  :  83.     C.  192. 
Oh  no,  she  will  not  die  !     I  dare  not  hope  She  '11  die.     A  Blot 

2  :  174.     C.  228. 
but  I  Have  lived  indeed,  and  so  —  (yet  one  more  kiss)  —  can 

die  !     Gondola  2  :  269.     C.  264. 
Could  bow  down  on  his  quiet  broken  heart.  Die  awe-struck 

and  submissive.     Luria  2  :  371.     C.  303. 
We  are  to  die ;  but  even  I  perceive  'T  is  not  a  very  hard  thing 
so  to  die.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  346.     C.  293. 


DIE  — DISGRACED  53 

Die.      You  'd  die  for  me,  I  should  not  be   surprised.      Luria 

2  :  363.     C.  300. 

Not  to  die  so  much  as  slide  out  of  life,  Pushed  by  the  general 

horror  and  common  hate.     R.  and  B.  3  :231.     C.  507. 
Careless   until,  the   cup  drained,  I  should   die.      R.  and  B. 

3  :  264.     C.  519. 

Terrible  so  to  be  alive  yet  die  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  407.     C.  574. 
we  must  wait  and  die  to  know  the  rest.   Fijine  4  :  436.    C.  732. 
labor  the  riglit  life.  And  die  at  good  old  age  as  grand  men  use. 

^W.  ^.5:240.     C.  681. 
"  Die,  Whoso  breaks  our  law  !  "  they  publish,  God  and  Nature 

equally.     LaS.6: 71.     C.  857. 
Never  dream  That  what  once  lived  shall  ever  die  !     Chas.  A. 
6:361.     C.977. 
Dies.     The  lamp  o'erswims  with  oil,  the  stomach  flags  Loaded 
with  nurture,  and  that  man's  soul  dies.    Death  in  D.  4  :  202. 
C.  390. 
this  all-inadequate  Organ  which,  quivering  within  me,  dies. 
/oc/j.6:231.     C.  926. 
Died,    mutely  in  forlorn  obedience  died  !    Lima  2  :  372.    C.  303. 
Got  heated,  caught  a  fever  and  so  died:   A  warning  to  the 

over-vigilant.     R.  and  B.  3  :  137.     C.  469. 
held  His  peace  and  died  in  silent  good  old  age.     Tioo  Poets 

6:110.     C.  872. 
So  tottered,    muttered,   mumbled   he,  till   he   died,  perhaps 

found  rest.     Hal.  and  Hob  6  :  130.     C.  880. 
Such  joy  is  fugitive:  she  died  full  soon.     He  did  his  best  to 
die.     Dan.  Bar.  6  :  309.     C.  957. 
Diffidence.      Ever  with  best  desert   goes  diffidence.      A  Blot 

2  :  147.     C.  218. 
Dinners,     council  dinners  made  rare  havoc  With  Claret,  Mo- 
selle, Vin-de-Grave,  Hock.     Pied  Piper  2  :  285.     C.  269. 
Disappointment.    "  I  sleep  out  disappointment."   Joch.  6  :  224. 

C.  923. 
Discord.     —  they  well-nigh  made  euphonious  Discord.     Flute- 

ilf.  6:423;  7:78.     C.  1000. 
Discouragement.     Age  and  experience  bring  discouragement. 

Prince  H.  4  :  357.     C.  692. 
Discourse.     As  you  '11  hear  in  the  off-hand  discourse  .  .  .  (all 

nature,  no  art).     En glishm.  2 -.262.     C.  262. 
Disease,     one  ordained  To   free  the  flesh  from   fell  disease. 

Para.  1:69.     C.  28. 
Disgrace,     only,  let  disgrace  Be  plain,  be  proper  —  proper  for 
the  world.     King  V.  1:407.     C.  160. 
the  surplusage  of  disgrace,   the  spilth  Over  and  above  the 
measure  of  infamy.     R.  and  B.  3  :  176.     C.  484. 
Disgraced,     he  preferred  to  lose  his  child,  .  .  .  rather  than 
she  walk  .  .  .  child  disgraced.     R.  and  B.  3  :317.     C.  539. 


54  DISGUISE  — DIVORCE 

Disguise.     Honor  and  faith,  —  a  lie  and  a  disguise,  Probably 

for  all  .  .  .  Certainly  for  himself  !    R.  and  B.  3  :  307.    C.  558. 
Dish.     'T  were  hard  to  serve  up  a  congenial  dish  Out  of  these 

ill-agreeing  morsels.     R.  and  B.  3  :  122.     C.  462. 
Disjoining,     his  accustomed  fault  of  breaking  yoke,  Disjoin- 
ing liini  who  felt  from  him  who  spoke.     Sor.  1:291.     C.  113. 
Disparage,    how  they  dissect  And  sueeringly  disparage  the  few 

truths  Got  at  a  life's  cost.     Para.  1:  lOo!^     C.  42. 
Better  estimate  Exorbitantly,  than  disparage  aught.     R.  and 

^.3:353.     C.  553. 
Disparity.     Wliat  nostrum,  say.  Will  make  the  Rich  and  Poor, 

expertly  dosed,  Forget  disparity.     Joch.  6  :  227.     C.  925. 
Dispute.     Dispute  you  for  these  gauds  ?    Druses  2  •.2^.    C.  198. 
Disqualified.     Disqualified    myself    by    idle    days    And    busy 

nights,  long  since,  from  holding  hard  On  cable.      Inn  A. 

5:201.     C.  780. 
Disservice.     Xobody   did    me    one    disservice    more,    Spoke 

coldly  or  looked  strangely.     R.  and  B.  3  :  275.     C.  524. 
Dissimulation,     youth   contrives    to  carry  off  Dissimulation. 

A7h(7  C.  1:397".     C.  156. 
Distinction,     dared    achieve    Dreadful    distinction,   at   soul- 
safety's  price.     Ft.  Fu.  6  :330.     C.  965. 
So  that  all  five,  to-day,  have  suffered  death  With  no  distinc- 
tion save  in  dying.     R.  and  B.  3  :464.     C.  590. 
Distinctions.     God's  finger  marks  distinctions,  all  so  fine,  We 

would  confound.     Luria  2  :401.     C.  314. 
Distinguish,     to  distinguish  wrong  from  right.  Both  must  be 

known  in  each  extreme.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :338.     C.  969. 
Distinguished.      Distinguished   names!  —  but   'tis,   somehow, 

As  if  they  played  at  being  names  Still  more  distinguished. 

Waring  2  :  274.     C.  266. 
So  that  you  scarce  distinguished  fell  from  fleece.      R.  and  B. 

3  :  15.     C.  420. 
Distrust.     In  the  least  things  have  faith,  yet  distrust  in  the 

greatest  of  all  ?     Saul  2  :  56.     C.  183. 
Wholly  distrust    thy  knowledge,  then,  and   trust  As  wholly 

love  allied  to  ignorance  !     Pillar  6  :269.     C.  941. 
Divided.     You  and  I  are  divided  ever  more  In  soul  and  body  : 

get  you  gone  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  218.     C.  501. 
Divine,     the  divine  lies  linked  Fast  to  the  human,  free  to  move 

as  moves  Its  proper  match.     Ber.  de  M.  6  :298.     C.  953. 
The  divine  instance  of  self-sacrifice  That  never  ends  and  aye 

begins  for  man  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  392.     C.  568. 
Where  is  the  use  .  .  .  Unless  we  turn.  The  earthly  gift  to  an 

end  divine  ?     Stat,  and  B.  2  :  326.     C.  285. 
Diviner,     some  few  traces  Of  a  diviner  nature  which  look  out 

Tlirough  his  corporeal  baseness.     Para.  1:84.     C.  34. 
Divorce.     Cast  loose  a  wife  proved  loose  and  castaway  :  He 


DIVORCE  — DOOM  55 

elaiinefl  in  due  form  a  divorce  at  least.     R.  and  B.  3  :  Gl. 
C.  4.-38. 
Divorce.     And  last  of  all,  "  Nor  }'et  divorce  a  wife  !  "    Ordains 

the   Church,   "  she   typifies   ourself."      R.  and   B.  3  :  294. 

C.  531. 
Dizzy.     How  could  I  lint  grow  dizzy  in  their  pent  Dim  palace- 
rooms.     King  V.  l:'il\.     C.  146. 
Do.     To  do  what  was  undone,  repair  such  spoil,  Alter  the  past 

—  nothing  would  give  the  chance  !     Sor.  1:292.     C.  114. 
Thou  born  to  do,  undo,  and  do  again,  And   never  to  be   still. 

Zi(Wrt2:392.     C.  311. 
I  do  what  many  dream  of  all  their  lives,  —  Dream  ?  strive  to 

do,  and  agonize  to  do,  And  fail  in  doing.     Andrea  4  :  84. 

C.  346. 
Let  things  be  —  not  seem,  I  counsel  rather,  —  do,  and  nowise 

dream  !     Ger.  de  L.G:  352.     C.  974. 
Does.     —  't  is  not  what  man  Does  which  exalts  him,  but  what 

man  Would  do  !     Saul  2  :  57.     C.  184. 
That  low  man  seeks  a  little  thing  to  do.  Sees  it  and  does  it. 

Grarn.  Fun.  2  :  312.     C.  280. 
Doctor.     Doctor  once  dubbed  —  what  ignorance  shall  balk  Thy 

march  triumphant  ?     Doctor  6  :  182.     C.  906. 
Doctrine,     diner-out,  the  fribble  Who  wants  a  doctrine  for  a 

chopping-block.     Sludge  4  :  240.     C.  405. 
Dodington.     folks  see  but  one  Fool  moi-e,  as  well  as  knave,  in 

Dodington.     Geo.  B.  D.  6  :327.     C.  9G4. 
Dog.     A  mere  instinctive  dog.      Tray  6  :  142.     C.  887. 
Dogma.     They  boast  no  fresh  distillerv  of  faith;  'Tis  dogma 

in  the  bottle,  bright  and  old.     Red  Cott.  5  :  70.     C.  762. 
Dogmas.     No  dogmas  nail  your  faith  ;  and  what  remains  But 

say  so,  like  the  honest   man  you   are  ?      Bishop  B.  4 :  95. 

C.  350. 
Domestic.     Constant  to  that  devotion  of  the  hearth.  Still  cap- 
tive in  those  dear  domestic  ties  !    R.  and  B.  3  :  26.     C.  424. 
Because  ambition's  range  Is  nowise  tethered  by  domestic  tie. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  318.     C.  540. 
Done.     And  here  was  plenty  to  be  done.  And  she  that  could  do 

it,  great  or  small.  She  was  to  do  nothing  at  all.    Flight  2  :  293. 

C.  272. 
He  had  done  enough,  to  firk  you  were  too  much.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  61.     C.  438. 
acknowledge  work  that 's  done,  INIisdoiibt  men  who  have  still 

their  work  to  do  !     Ari.  A.b:  159.     C.  652. 
Donne.     Better  and  truer  verse  none  ever  wrote  (Despite  the 

antique  outstretched  a-i-on)  Than  .  .  .  Doime  !    Two  Poets 

6  :  102.     C.  869. 
Doom,     as  earth  awaits  the  fall  O'  the  bolt  and  flash  of  doom. 

Numph.  5  :  350.     C.  814. 


56  DOOM-WORD  —  DRAWING'S 

Doom-Tvord.     As  if  no  meteoric  finger  hnshed  The  (loom-word 

just  on  the  destroyer's  lip.     Luria  2  : 3(54.     C.  300. 
Door.     Door  on  door  exactly  waiting,  All 's  the  set  face  of  a 
child.     Gondola  2  :2G7.    "C.  203. 
Wide  as  a  heart,  opened  the  door  at  once.      R.  and  B.  3  :  15. 

C.  420. 
(Bow,  smile,  And  backing  ont  from  door  soft-closed  behind.) 
//m /I.  5:268.     C.  783. 
Dotage,      his   dotage   calls   for  governance.      Ari.  A.  5:159. 

C.  052. 
Dotard,     the  dotard,  in  whom  folly  and  age  Wrought,  more 

than  enmity  or  malevolence.     R.  and  B.  3  :  179.     C.  486. 
Doubt,     douht  Rose  tardily  in  one  so  fenced  about  From  most 
that  nurtures  judgment.     Sor.  1:208.     C.  80. 
your  footsteps  kept  the  track  Through  dark  and  doubt :  take 

all  the  light  at  once  !     Luria  2  :  387.     C.  309. 
At  the  worst,  I  stood  in  doubt  On  cross-road,  took  one  path  of 

many  paths.    R.  and  B.  3  :425.     C.  581. 
let    doubt    occasion    still    more    faith !      Bishop   B.   4 :  107. 

C.  355. 
I  prize  the  doubt  Low  kinds  exist  without.  Finished  and  finite 

clods,  untroubled  by  a  spark.     Ben  Ezra  4  :  186.     C.  383. 
Such  pains  to  keep  me  far,  yet  here  stand  I,  Your  doubt  inside 

the  faith-defence  of  you  !     Red  Colt.  5  :  27.     C.  746. 
doubt,  which  kills  With  hiss  of    '  What  if  sorrows  end  de- 
lights ?  '     Jock.  6  :  230.     C.  926. 
World-weary  earth-born  ones  !      Darkest  doubt  Or  deepest 
despondency  keeps  you  out  ?   Reph.  6  :  431  ;  7: 95.    C.  1004. 
Doubts.     'T  is  hardly  wise  to  moot  Such  topics  :  doubts  are 
many  and  faith  is  weak.     Para.  1:  73.     C.  30. 
Tracking  his  way  through  doubts  and  fears.     Chris.-Eve  4  : 9. 

C.  319. 
Doubts   at  the  very  bases  of  my  soul  In  the  grand  moments 

when  she  probes  herself.     Bishop  B.  4  :  105.     C.  354. 
Who   knows  most,  doubts   most  ;   entertaining  hope,  Means 
recognizing  fear.      7Vo  Poe/s  6  :  112.     C.  873. 
DovrnTvard.     'Tis  looking  downward  that  makes  one  dizzy. 

Old  Pict.2:39.     C.  176. 
Dram-bottle.    The  caddy  gives  wav  to  the  dram-bottle.    Sludge 

4  :  232.     C.  402. 
Draught.      I   asked  one   draught   of   earlier,   happier   sights. 

Childe  R.  2  :3:i3.     C.  287. 
Draughts.     Draughts  dregward  loose  tongue-tie.   Apol.  and  F. 

6:292.     C.  951. 
Dra^wback.     Oh,  and  much  drawback  !  what  were  earth  with- 
out ?     R.  and  B.  3  :365.     C.  557. 
Drav/ing's.     A  fault  to  pardon  in  the  drawing's  lines.  Its  body, 
so  to  speak  :  its  soul  is  right.     Andrea  4  :85.     C.  346. 


DRAWS  — DREAMING  57 

Dravrs.      Draws,  hopes  iu  time  the  eye  grows  nice.      Dls  Al. 

4  :  173.     C.  379. 
Dream.     But  who  can  take  a  dream  for  a  truth  ?     Stat,  and  B. 
2:326.     C.  285. 
both  perceived  they  had  dreamed  a  dream  ;  Which  hovered 

as  dreams  do,  still  above.     Stat,  and  B.  2  :  326.     C.  285. 
Over  and  ended  ;  a  terrific  dream.    It  is  the  good  of  dreams  — 

so  soon  they  go  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  250.     C.  514. 
Slept   his   hour's-sleep  and   dreamed   his  dream,  and   woke. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  344.     C.  549. 
And  my  whole  soul  revolves,  the  cup  runs  over.  The  world 
and  life  's  too  big  to  pass  for  a  dream.     Fra  Lippo  4  :  79. 
C.  344. 
And  thence  ye  may  perceive  the  world  's  a  dream.     Life,  how 

and  what  is  it  ?     St.  Prax.  4  :  89.     C.  348. 
But  dream  goes  idly  in  the  air.     To  earth  !     Ari.  ^.  5  :  177. 

C.  659. 
I  am,  anyhow,  a  truth,  though  all  else  seem  And  be  not  :  if  I 

dream,  at  least  I  know  I  dream.     Fifine  4  :418.     C.  721. 
Do  I  dream  ?    Say  ye  so  ?    Clouds  break,  then  !    Move,  world  ! 
I  have  gained  my  "  Pou  sto  " .'     Fust  6  :  373.     C.  982. 
Dream-marchers.     Dream-marchers  marched,  kept  marching, 

slow  and  sure.     Chas.  A.  6  :355.     C.  975. 
Dream-performances.      dream-performances    that    will    Be 

never  more  than  dreamed.     <Sor.  1:252.     C.  98. 
Dream-"wrork.     Here  too  has  been  dream-work,  delusion  too. 

R.  and  B.  Z  :2QS.     C.  497. 
Dream's.     All  my  days,  I  '11  go  the  softlier,  sadlier,  For  that 

dream's  sake  !     Fears  5  :  345.     C.  811. 
Dreams.     Dreams  long  forgotten,  little  in  themselves.  Return 
to  me.     Pippa  1 :  353.     C.  139. 
Dreams,  "  Thus  should  I  fight,  save  or  rule  the  world  "... 
Then   smilinglv,  contentedly,  awakes.     R.  and  B.  3  :  236. 
C.  508. 
Our  troublesomest  dreams  die  off  In  daylight.   Inn  A.  5  :288. 

C.  791. 
My  dreams  of  good  and  fair  In  soaring  upwards  had  dissolved, 
unscathed.     Joch.  6  :  225.     C.  924. 
Dreamed.     Ah  that  such  pleasant  life  should  be  but  dreamed  ! 

Paw.  1:24.     C.  11. 
Dreamers.      When  sickly  dreamers  of  the  impossible    Decry 
plain  sturdiness  which  does  the  feat.      R.  and  B.  3  :  342. 
C.  549. 
Dreaming.     So  dreaming  disappoints  !     The  fresh  and  strange 
at   first.   Soon   wears   to   trite   and   tame.      Fijine  4 :  440. 
C.  734. 
Dreaming,  blindfold  led  Bj^  visionary  hand,  did  soul's  advance 
Precede  my  body's.    Chris.  Sm.  6  :  312.     C.  959. 


58  DRINK  — DUTY 

Drink.     Strong,   weak,   sweet,    sour,   home-made    or    foreign 

drink  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  354.     C.  553. 
With  the  night  —  ah,  what  ensued  From  draughts  of  a  drink 

hell-brewed  ?     Bad  D.  II.  6  :  397;  7: 20.     C.  990. 
Dross,     cast  in  fining-pot,  We  learn,  when    what  seemed  ore 

assaved  proves  dross,  —  Surelier  true  gold's  worth.     Pillar 

6  :  268.     C.  9-tO. 
Drowning,     one    bold   splash    Into   the   mid-shame,   and   the 

shiver  ends.  Though  cramp  and  drowning  luay  begin  per- 
haps.    Red  Cott.  5  :  45.     C.  753. 
Drowse.     How  you  .  .  .  Forget  the  world 's  awake  while  here 

you  drowse  !     Drmes  2  :  105.     C.  200. 
Drudge,     a   poor  clerkly  drudge  at  desk  All  dav.     Red  Cott. 

5:33.     C.  749. 
Dry-rot.     Drv-rot  at  ease  till  the  Judgment-day  !     Sib.  Schaf. 

2:11.     dlG7. 
Dubitation.     Float  thy  clogged   spirit  free   and   unperplexed 

Above  dry  dubitation  !     Joch.  6  :  224.     C.  923. 
Dulness.     innate  blockish  dulness.     Para.  1:75.     C.  30. 
Dumps.    Sir  Dignity  i'  the  dumps  ?   Pat  him  ?    We  drub  Self- 
knowledge,  rather,  into   frowzy  pate.     R.   and  B.  3  :  429. 

C.  583. 
Duomo.     I'  the  Duomo,  —  watch  the  day's  last  gleam  outside 

Turn,  as   into   a  skirt   of  God's  own   robe.  Those    lancet- 

windows'  jewelled  miracle.     R.  and  B.  3  :  199.     C.  493. 
Dupe,     simply  dupe  and  nowise  fellow-cheat !     /?in^.  5:294. 

C.  794. 
Dupes.      Mortals  —  come  what   Come    there   may  —  are   still 

the  dupes  of  hope  there  's  luck   in   store.      Pietro  G  :  172. 

C.  901. 
Duplicate.     "  'T  is   only  a    duplicate,   A   thing   of   no  value ! 

Take  it,  I  supplicate!  "     Likeness  4  :221.     C.  397. 
Dust.     (Written  by  one  whose  deft  right  hand  was  dust  To  the 

last  digit,  ages  ere  my  birth.)     R.  and  B.  3  :  356.     C.  5>4. 
dust  —  instinct  v,'ith  fire  unknowable!     Sun  Q  •.2o2.     C.  934. 
Duty.     What   matters   happiness?      Duty!      King  C.  1:410. 

C.  162. 
All  were  against  me,  —  that,  I  knew  the  first:  But,  knowing 

also  what  my  duty  was,  I  did  it.  R.  and  B.  3  :  130.    C.  466. 
Duty  is  still  Wisdom:  I  have  been  wise.     R.  and  B.  3:212. 

C.  499. 
told  me  There  was  no  dutv  patent  in  the  world  Like  daring 

try  be  good  and  true  myself.     R.  and  B.  3  :  229.     C.  506. 
when  exile  ends,  I  mean  to  do  mv  duty  and  live  long.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  235.     C.  508. 

Do  out  the  duty  !     R.  and  B.  3 :  278.     C.  525. 

Why  should  we  do  onr  duty  past  the  need  ?   R.  and  B.  3  :446. 

C.  590. 


DUTY  — EARNESTNESS  59 

Duty.     I  looked  be3'ond  the  world  for  truth  and  beauty  :  Sought, 
found,  and  did  my  duty.     Epil.  Bean-St.  G  :  282.     C.  91G. 

Duty's.     But  who    are  we,  to  spurn    For  peace'    sake,  duty's 
pointing  ?     Geo.  B.  D.  6  :  321.     C.  902. 

D'warf' s-play.     In   dwarfs-play   spent   Was  giant's   prowess. 
Joch.  G  :  214.     C.  919. 

Dying,     dying  so  That  shame  should  want  its  extreme  bitter- 
ness.    Luria  2  :  37G.     C.  305. 
one  cannot  judge  Of  what   has  been  the  ill  or  well  of  life, 

The  day  that  one  is  dying.     R.  and  B.  3  :24-l.     C.  511. 
There  's  the  life  lying,  And  I  see  all  of  it,  Only,  I  'm  dying ! 
Pisgah  I.  5  :  342.     C.  810. 


E 

Eagle.     The  eagle  am  T,  with  my  fame  in  the  world.  The  wren 
is  he,  with  his  maiden  face.     A  Light  W.  '1:211.     C.  2G7. 
Must  the  eagle  lilt  Lark-like,  needs  fir-tree    blossom  rose- 
like ?     ylri. /1.5:149.     C.  648. 
The  eagle,  like  some  skyey  derelict.   Ber.  de  M.  6  :  301.   C.  954. 
Eagles.     The  valley-level  has  its  hawks  no  doubt:  May  not  the 

rock-top  have  its  eagles,  too  ?     Colomhe  2  :  220.     C.  247. 
Ear.      Make  the  world  prick  up  its   ear  !      Master  H.  2  :  92. 
C.  195. 
While   either  ear  is  cut  Thin  as  a  dusk-leaved  rose  carved 
from  a  cocoa-nut.     Fijine  4  :  388.     C.  704. 
Ears.     —  How  could  you  ever  prick  those  perfect  ears,  Even 
to  put  the  pearl  there  !     Andrea  4  :83.     C.  346. 
What  is  he  buzzing  in  my  ears  ?     "  Now  that  I  come  to  die, 
Do  I  view  the  world  as  a  vale  of  tears  ?  "     Confess.  4  :  214. 
C.  394. 
Earn.     Earn  the  means  first  —  God  surely  will  contrive  Use 

for  our  earning.     Gram.  Fun.  2  :311.     C.  279. 
Earned.     Now,  what  an  evening  have  I  earned  to-day  !     Hail, 
ve  true  pleasures,  all  the  rest  are  false  !     R.  and  B.  3  :318. 
C.  540. 
Earnest.      This  earnest  of  the  end  shall  never  fade  !     Para. 
1:45.     C.  19. 
Who  's  alive  ?    Our  men  scarce  seem  in  earnest  now.      War- 
ing 2 : 274.     C.  26G. 
Turn  our  sport  to  earnest  With  a  visage  of  the  sternest  ! 

Waring  2  :  274.     C.  266. 
There  's  no  fool's-freak  here,  naught  to  soundly  swinge.  Only 
a  man  in  earnest.     R.  and  B.  3  :418.     C.  578. 
Earnestness.     By  stress  Of  what  does  guile  succeed  but  ear- 
nestness. Earnest  woi-d,  look   and   gesture  ?      Geo.  B.  D. 
6:325.     C.  963. 


60  EARNESTNESS  — EARTH 

Earnestness.    •  earnestness   seems   never   earnest  more   Than 

wlien   it   (Ions   for   garb  —  indifference.      Ari.   A.   5:169. 

C.  G5G. 
£!arth.     And   the  earth  changes   like  a   human   face.      Para. 

1:110.     C.  4G. 
Earth  fades,  heaven  breaks  on  me:  I  shall  stand  next  Before 

God's  throne.    Straf.  1:188.     C.  72. 
Earth    turned  in    her   sleep  with  pain,  sultrily  suspired  for 

proof.     Serenade  2  :  73.     C.  189. 
The  earth  would  be  no  longer  earth  to  me.  The  life  out  of  all 

life  was  gone  from  me.     A  Blot  2  :  178.     C.  230. 
Tiiere  mav  be  heaven;  there  must  be  hell;    Meantime,  there 

is  our  earth  here  —  well  !     Time'.'?  R.  2  :  253.     C.  258. 
Earth  being  so  good,  would  heaven  seem  best  ?     Last  Ride 

2:281.     C.  268. 
Is  this,   we  live  on,   heaven  and   the   final  state.  Or  earth 

which  means   probation  to  the  end  ?      R.  and  B.  3  :  174. 

C.  483. 
Leave  earth,  seek  heaven  or  find  its  opposite  !      R.  and  B. 

3  :  422.     C.  579. 

Earth  breaks  up,  time  drops  away,  In  flows  heaven.     Chris.- 

Eve  4  :  14.     C.  321. 
Thy  choice  was  earth.     Eas.-Day  4  :  47.     C.  332. 
Earth  forced  on  a  soul's  use  while  seeing  heaven.     Karsh. 

4 :  67.     C.  339. 
Here  on  my  earth,  earth's  every  man  my  friend.     Pict.  Ig. 

4  :  73.     C.  342. 

Shall  earth  and  the  cramped  moment-space  Yield  the  heav- 
enly crowning  grace  ?     /.  Lee  4  :  163.     C.  376. 

The  earth  is  your  place  of  penance,  then.  Worst  4  :  171. 
C.  378. 

For  earth  had  attained  to  heaven,  there  was  no  more  near  nor 
far.     AUV.  4. '.18Z.     C.  382. 

Well,  it  is  earth  with  me  ;  silence  resumes  her  reign.  Abt  V. 
4:185.     C.  .383. 

Earth  is  not  all  one  lie,  this  truth  attests  me  true  !     Fifine 

4  :  420.     C.  723. 

Earth 's  a  mill  where  we  grind  and  wear  mufflers.     PaccJi. 

5  :  327.     C.  805. 

I  find  earth  not  gray  but  rosv,  Heaven  not  grim  but  fair  of 

hue.     At  the  M.  5:^35.     C."^808. 
To  each  mortal  peradventure  earth  becomes  a  new  machine. 

La  S.6: 63.     C.  853. 
were  earth  and  all  it  holds  illusion  mere,  Only  a  machine  for 

teaching  love  and  hate  and  hope  and  fear.      La  S.  6  :  65. 

C.  854.^ 
earth  was  man's  probation-place:  Liberty  of  doing  evil  gave 

his  doinjr  gfood  a  gfrace.     La  S.  6  :  71.     C.  857. 


EARTH  —  ELEGANC  E  61 

Earth,     earth,  where  wage  War,  just  for  soul's  instruction,  pain 

with  joy,  Folly  with  wistlom.     Fr.  Fu.  G  :  338.     C.  9G9. 
Earth  is  earth,  and  not  heaven,  and  ne'er  will  be.    Pacch.  5  :327. 

C.  805. 
Earth's.      Earth's   surface-blank  whereou   the   elder   age  Put 

color.     Ger.  de  L.  6  :  346.     C.  971. 
Ease,     there  wanted  not  a  touch,  A  tang  of  .  .  .  well,  it  was 

not  wholly  ease.     How  it  S.  4  :59.     C.  336. 
Easier,     there 's    an    easier  sense   Wherein  to  take  such  vow 

than  suits  the  first  Rough  rigid  reading.     R.  and  B.  3  :  195. 

C.  492. 
East,     the  wide  East  where  all  Wisdom  sprung;  The  bright 

South,  where  she  dwelt.     Para.  1:35.     C.  15. 
East-wind,     although  fed  by  the  east-wind,  fulsome-fiue  With 

foretaste  of  the  Land  of  Promise.  R  .  and  B.  3  :  150.    C.  474. 
Easy,     easy  rule  Befitting  the  well-born  and   thorough-bred, 

R.  and  B.^ -.2^0.     C.  531. 
Easy  to  say,  easy  to  do:  step  right  Now  you  've  stepped  left 

and  stumbled  on  the  thing.     R.  and  B.  3  :  436.     C.  585. 
Ecclesiasticized.      ecclesiasticized,    Regularize  .   .  .  empha- 
size. Then  latinize,  and  lastly  Cicero-ize.   it.  and  B.  3  :  318. 

C.  540. 
Echoes.     Echoes  die  off,  scarcely  reverberate  Forever,  —  why 

should  ill  keep  echoing  ill.     R.  and  B.  3  :251.     C.  514. 
Eclipse.     God  of  eclipse  and  each  discolored  star.  Why  do  I 

linger  then?     King  C.  1:412.     C.  162. 
Ecstasy.     A  year  of  this  compression's  ecstasy.    In  a  B.  i:  135. 

C.  365. 
Educated,     till  The  educated  taste  turns  unawares  From  cus- 
tomary dregs  to  draught  divine  ?     Ari.  A.  5  •.123.     C.  637. 
Education.     I    had   forgotten   Your   education,   trials,   much 

temptation.  Some  weakness.     Straf.  1:188.     C.  72. 
Where  are  the  fruits  of  education,  where  The  morals  which 

at  first  distinguished  yoii —     Red  Cott.  5  :51.     C.  755. 
Eel.     The  morn  when  first  it  thunders  in  March,  The  eel  in  the 

pond  gives  a  leap,  they  say.     Old  Pict.  2  :37.     C.  176. 
Effect.     AH  is  effect  of  cause:    As  it  would,  has  willed  and 

done  Power.     i?et'.  6  :436;  7: 104.     C.  1005. 
Effects.     The  world  is  used  to  have  its  business  done  On  other 

grounds,   find   great   effects   produced   For   power's   sake, 

fame's  sake,  motives   in   men's   mouth.      In  a  B.  4:-.  136. 

C.  366. 
He  alone,  Who,  nothing  tasked,  is  nothing  weary  too,  May 

clearly  scan  the  little  he  effects.     Para.  1:68.     C.  28. 
Efforts.      Innumerable   efforts   to  cue  end.      King   V.  1:371. 

C.  146. 
Elegance,     rural  isolated  elegance,  Careless  simplicity.     Red 

Cott.  5:22.     C.  744. 


62  ELEMENTAL  — END 

Elemental,     elemental  flame  Which  star-flecks  heaven's  dark 

floor.     Rev.  6 -A-M;  7:102.     C.  1005. 
Elements.     As  though   the  elements,   whom  mercy  checked, 

Had    mustered   hate   for  cue  eruption  more.      R.  and  B. 

'^  :  :i72.     C.  5G0. 
Elephant,     the  elephant  who,  brute-beast  .  .  .  understood  and 

punisiied  .  .  .  His  master's  naughty  spouse   and  faithless 

friend.     R.  and  B.  3:0.     C.  410. 
Since  fifty  girls  made  one  white  elephant.     Bea.  Sig.  6  :  416  ; 

7  :  05.     C.  998. 
Eliot,     lion  Eliot,  that  grand  Englishman.    Straf.l-.lSi.    Col. 
Elixir.     — condensed   Elixir,   no    milk-mildness    of    the   vine  ! 

Joch.  6  :  230.     C.  920. 
Eloquence.     And  language — ah,  the  gift  of  eloquence!     R. 

and  B.  3  :  27.     C.  425. 
—  I  see  him  strain  on  tiptoe,  soar  and  pour  Eloquence  out,  nor 

stay  nor  stint  at  all.     R.  and  B.  3  :284:.     C.  527. 
Ema.     'T  is    Ema,  though,  the  other  rivulet.  The    one-arched 

brown  brick  bridge  yawns  over.     R.  and  B.  3  :404.     C.  572. 
Emaciation.     —  Gray  male  emaciation,  haply  streaked  Car- 
mine by  scourgings.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  340.     C.  909. 
Embarrassment.     In  case  the  woman  of  his  love  speaks  first, 

From  what  embarrassment  she  sets  him  free  !     R.  and  B. 

3 : 331.     C.  544. 
Embellishment.    One  laugh  of  color  and  embellishment.    Red 

Cott.  5  :  24.     C.  745. 
Emboldened.      Emboldened  by  triumph  of  recency.      Pacch. 

5  :  323.     C.  804. 
Eminence,     sad  post.  Huge  care,  abundant  lack  of  peace  of 

mind ;  Who  would  desiderate  the  eminence  ?   King  V.  1 :  380. 

C.  149. 
Emprise,     give  a  dignity  to  idler  life  By  the  dim  prospect  of 

emprise  to  come.     Straf.  1:178.     C.  08. 
End.     the    end    Is   piteous,  you  may   see,  but   much   between 

Pleasant  enough.     5or.  1:200.     C.  80. 
Look  at  the  end  of  work,  contrast  The  petty  done,  the  undone 

vast.     Last  Ride  2 -/ISO.     C.  208. 
neither   pride  Nor  hope  rekindling  at   the  end   descried,  So 

much  as  gladness  that  some  end  might  be.    Ckilde  R.  2  :  330. 

C.  287. 
And   just   as  far  as  ever  from  the  end  !     Childe  R.  2  :  335. 

C.  288. 
The  whole  procedure  's  overcharged.  —  its  end  In  too  strict 

keeping  with  the  bad  first  step.     Luria  2  :  306.     C.  301. 
Here  were  the  end,  had  anything  an  end.     R.  and  B.  3  :  458. 

C.  594. 
at  the  end  of  life.  When  you  walk  alone,  and  review  the  past. 

Worst  4  :  171.     C.  378. 


END  — ENGLAND  63 

End.     Oh,  yes  —  The  other  metliod  's  favored  in  our  day  !    The 
end  ere  the  beginning'.      Chris.  Sm.  G -.317.     C.%1. 
Is  an  end  to  your  life's  work  out  of  ken  ?    lieph.  6  :  431;  7: 100. 

C.  1004. 
Since  end  things  must,  end  howsoe'er  things  may.     Colombe 

2  :  197.     C.  237. 
Who  knows  but  the  world  may  end  to-night  ?      Last  Ride 
2:279.     C.  267. 
Ends.     Ends  Accomplished  turn  to  means.    .50^1:298.    C.  116. 
Oh,  my  whole  life  that  ends  to-day  !    Too  Late  4  :  179.    C.  381. 
Has  in  life  the  wrong  tlie  better  ?    Happily  life  ends  so  soon ! 
LaS.Q-.Q'i.     C.  853. 
Endeavor.     Tliat  long  endeavor,  earnest,  patient,  slow.  Trem- 
bling at  last  to  its  assured  result.    In  a  B.  4::  136.    C.  366. 
Endurance.     Next,  had  endurance  overpassed  the  mark  And 
turned   resentment   needing   remedy.       R.  and  B.  3  :  105. 
C.  455. 
Endure.     "  How  long  the  Many  must  endure  the  One."     Slraf. 
1:181.     C.  09. 
Endure,  endure,  beloved  !     King  V.  1:371.     C.  146. 
Sublime  in  new  impatience  with  the  foe  !     Endure  man  and 

obey  God.     R.  and  B.  3  :  379.     C.  563. 
We  must  endure  the  false,  no  particle  of  which  Do  we  acquaint 
us  with,  but  up  we  mount  a  pitch  Above  it.     Fijine  4  :  410. 
C.  717. 
Endures,     for  deem  you  she  endures  the  whip.  Nor  winces  at 
the  goad,  nay,  restive,  kicks  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  325.     C.  542. 
Nothing  endures:  the  wind  moans,  saying  so;    We  moan  in 
acquiescence.     /.  Lee  4  :  160.     C.  375. 
Enemy.     An  enemy  it  was  who  luiawares  Ruined  the  wheat  by 
interspersing  tares.     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  298.     C.  953. 
Of  all   are  you  the  enemy:   out  with  you  From  the  common 
light  and  air  and  life  of  man  !    R.  and  B.  3  :  105.     C.  456. 
Enemies,     changed  and  enemies,  for  all  their  words.  And  all 
is  mockery  and  a  maddening  show.    Liiria  2:382.    C.  307. 
Energy,     the   energy  his  subtle  spear,  The  knowledge  which 

defends  him  like  a  shield.     R.  and  B.  3  :  378.     C.  562. 
Engage.      How  did  I  unaware  engage  so  much.      R.  and  B. 

3 : 324.     C.  542. 
England.     I   clierish   most   My   love    of   England  —  how   her 
name,  a  word  Of  hers  in  a  strange  tongue  makes  my  heart 
beat!     Paw.  1:17.     C.  8. 
So  Wentworth  heartened   Charles,  so  England  fell.      Slraf. 

1:131.     C.  50. 
England  !      I  see  thy  arm  in  this,  and  yield.     Straf.  1 :  169. 

C.  Go. 
England  !    Whose  sole  sake  I  still  have  labored  for,  with  dis- 
regard To  my  own  heart.     Stirtf.  1 :  190.     C.  73. 


64  ENGLAND  — ENVY 

England.     What  ?     England  that  you  help,  become  throngh 

you  A  green  and  putrefying  charnel.     Straf.  1:191.     C.  74. 
Oh,  to  be  in  England  Now  that  April 's  there.     IIome-T.  A. 

2:4G.     C.  179. 
"Here  and  here  did  England  help  me:  how  can  1  help  Eng- 
land ?  "  —  say.     Home-T.  S.  2  :  40.     C.  179. 
the  approaching  trample  ...  Of  federated  England.     Chas.  A. 

0 : 3G3.     C.  978. 
Enhaloes.     the  Shah's  sublime  estate  Merely  enhaloes,  leaves 

him  man  the  same.     Swi  6  :  250.     C.  933. 
Enjoy.    But,  knowing  nauglit,  to  enjoy  is  something  too.    Clean 

4  :  121.     C.  3G0. 
Was   there  naught   better   than   to   enjoy?     Z>(s  ^^.  4 :  177. 

C. 380. 
Enjoy   the  present  gift,  nor  wait  to  know  The  unknowable. 

Pillar  6  :  268.     C.  941. 
Enjoyment.     No  prejudice  in  enjoyment,  if  you  please,  To  the 

new  profession.     Ji.  and  B.  3  :  447.     C.  590. 
Enliven,     enliven  speech  with  many  a  flower  Refuses  obstinate 

to  blow  in  print.     R.  and  B.  3  :  320.     C.  540. 
Enough.     The  tick  of  time  inside  me,  turning-point  And  slight 

sense  there  was  now  enough  of  this.      R.  and  B.  3  :  150. 

C.  474. 
Enough  now,  if  the  Right  And  Good  and  Infinite  Be  named 

here.     Ben  Ezra  4  :  188.     C.  384. 
Enrage.     The  hare  stands  stock-still  to  enrage  the  hound  !     R. 

fm(/£.  3:433.     C.  584. 
Enriched,     true  He  was  ill-used  and  cheated  of  his  hope  To 

get  enriched  by  marriage  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :251.     C.  514. 
Enslave.     Who   shall   blame,  When   the   slaves   enslave,  the 

oppressed  ones  o'er  The  oppressor  triumph  forevermore  ? 

Holy-C.-l:?ASi.     C.  282. 
Enterprise.     Tiie  morn  has  enterprise,  deep  quiet  droops  With 

evening,  triumph  takes   the   sunset   hour.      Para.  1  :  118. 

C.  47. 
Enthusiasm.     Enthusiasm  's  the  best  thing,  I  repeat;    Only, 

we  can't  command  it.     Bishop  B.  4  :  104.     C.  354. 
Envy.     The  ignorance,  stupidity,  the  hate.   Envy  and  malice 

and  uucharitableness  That  bar  your  passage.      Prince  H. 

4  :  356.     C.  692. 
leered  in  a  furrow  of  envy,  mistrust.  Malice,  —  each  eye  of  her 

gave  me  its  glitter  of  gratified  hate  !    Phei.  6  :  125.    C.  878. 
I  envy  —  how  I  envy  liim  whose  soul  Turns  its  whole  energies 

to  some  one  end.  To  elevate  an  aim,  pursue  success  How- 
ever mean  !     Pan.  1 :  15.     C.  7. 
I  envy  —  how  I  envy  him  whose  mind  Turns  with  its  energies 

to  some  one  end.  To  elevate  a  sect  or  a  pursuit  However 

mean  I     Pau.  1 :  15.* 


ENVIED  — EURIPIDES  65 

Envied.  Ay,  but  if  certain  who  envied  should  see!  Rosny 
6:391;  7:4.     C.  987. 

Episode,  his  lay  was  but  an  episode  In  the  bard's  life.  Sor. 
1:252.     C.  98. 

Equal.    And  we  shall  all  be  equal  at  the  last.  Para.  1:110.  C.  44. 

Equals.  —  Women  and  slaves,  —  not  as,  to  please  your  pride, 
They  should  be,  but  your  equals,  as  they  are.  Ari.  A. 
5  :  148.     C.  647. 

Equality,  began  by  pulling  down  God,  and  went  on  .  .  .  set- 
ting up  your  own  genius  in  his  place,  —  still,  the  last, 
bitterest  concession  .  .  .  was  invariably  .  .  .  that  the  rest 
of  mankind,  .  .  .  stood  not,  nor  ever  could  stand,  just  on 
a  level  and  equality  with  yoiu'selves.  Soul's  Tr.  2  :  356. 
C.  297. 

Err.  honest  hearts:  they  easily  may  err.  But  in  the  main  they 
wish  well  to  the  truth.     R.  and  B.  3  :  193.     C.  491. 

Error,  truth  A  baffling  and  perverting  carnal  mesh  Binds  it, 
and  makes  all  error.     Para.  1 :  43.     C.  18. 

Escape,     he  seeks  Leave  to  contrive  you  an  escape  from  hell, 
R.  and  B.  3  :  263.     C.  519. 
licit  end  Enough  was  found  in  mere  escape  from  death.  To 
legalize  our  means  illicit.     R.  and  B.  3  :  331.     C.  545. 

Estimate.  But  we,  the  bystanders,  luitouched  by  toil,  Esti- 
mate each  aright.     Para.  1:68.     C.  28. 

Estranged.  Estranged  yet  amicable,  opposites  In  life  as  in 
respective  dwelling-place.     Red  Cott.  5  :  44.     C.  753. 

Eternal.  That  he,  the  Eternal  First  and  Last,  .  .  .  Whose 
wisdom,  too,  showed  infinite,  —  Would  prove  as  infinitely 
good.     Chris.-Eve  4:8.     C.  319. 

Eternity,  an  eternity  Of  speech,  to  match  the  immeasurable 
depth  O'  the  soul  that   then   broke   silence.      R.  and  B. 

3  :  269.     C.  521. 

When  eternity  affirms  the  conception  of  an  hour.      Abt   V. 
4 : 185.     C.  383. 
Eternity's.     Thrusting  in  time  eternity's  concern.     Sor.  1 :  206, 

C.  80. 
Euripides.     'So    sang    Euripides,'   she   said,    'so   sang    The 
meteoric  poet  of  air  and  sea,  Planets  and  the  pale  populace 
of  heaven,  The  mind  of  man,  and  all  that 's  made  to  soar  ! ' 
Balau.  4  :  268.     C.  604. 
Euripides,  The  Human  tvith  his  droppings  of  warm  tears.    Balau. 

4  :  328.     C.  627. 

one  moan  Iphigeneia  made  by  Aidis'  strand;  With  her  and 
music  died  Euripides.     Ari.  A.  5  :106.     C.  631. 

so  morbifies  their  flesh  The  poison-drama  of  Euripides.  Ari. 
^.5:123.     C.  638. 

Euripides  .  .  .  Gets  knowledge  through  the  single  aperture 
Of  High  and  Right.     Ari.  A.  5: 226.     C.  675. 


G6  EURIPIDES  — EXAMPLE 

Euripides.    We  Ml  up  and  work  !  won't  we,  Euripides  ?   Pacch. 

5  :  1331'.     C.  807. 
Evading.     Tliere  's  evading  and  per.suading  and  much  making 

law  amends  Somehow.     La  S.  G  :  71.     C.  857. 
Evanishment.     May  my  evanishment  forevermore  Help.      R. 

and  B.  3:276.     C.  524. 
Evening.     Where    the   quiet-colored   end   of    evening   smiles 
Miles  and  miles.     Love  2  :  25.     C.  171. 
To  me  at  least  was  never  evening  vet  But  seemed  far  beauti- 
f  idler  than  its  day.     R.  and  B.  3  :  245.     C.  512. 
Evenings.    How   well  I  know  what  I  mean  to  do  When  the 
long  dark  autumn  evenings  come.     By  Fire. 2  :59.     C.  185. 
Evidence,     evidence,  Uproar  in  the  echo,  live  fact  deadened 
down,  Talked  over,  bruited  abroad,  whispered  away.     R. 
and  B.  3  :  19.     C.  422. 
Evil.     —  P^vil,  the  scheme  by  which,  through  Ignorance,  Good 
labors  to  exist.     Sor.  1:256.     C.  99. 
Evil 's  beautified  In  every  shape.     Thrust  Beauty  then  aside 

And  banish  Evil  !     ^^or.  1:312.     C.  122. 
Wherefore  ?     After  all,  Is   Evil  a  result  less  natural  Than 

Good?     Snr.  1:312.     C.  122. 
evil  is  in  its  nature  loud,  while  good  Is  silent.      Pippa  1 :  352. 

C.  139. 
Evil   stands  not  crowned  on  earth,  while  breath  is  in  him. 

Before  2  :  87.     C.  194.  1 

Some  think.  Creation's  meant  to  show  him  forth:  I  say  it's  t 

meant   to    hide  him  all   it  can.   And  that 's   what  all   the 

blessed  evil 's  for.     Bishop  B.  4  :  106.     C.  355. 

Evil  or  good  may  be  better  or  worse  In  the  human  heart,  but 

the  mixture  of  each  Is  a  marvel  and  a  curse.     Gold  Hair 

4  :  169.     C.  378. 

Since  evil  never  means  part  company  With  mankind,  only 

shift  side  and  change  shape.     Prince  H.  4  :  340.     C.  685. 
What 's  the  worst  Of  Evil  but  that,  past,  it  overshades  The 

else-exempted  present  ?     Bean-St.  6  :  271.     C.  942. 
Black  is  the  bean-throw:  evil  is  the  Life  !     Bean-St.  6  :272. 

C.  942. 
Let  the  sage  Concede  a  use  to  evil,  though  there  starts  Full 

many  a  burgeon.     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  298.     C.  953. 
evil  .  .  .  Were   haply  as   cloud   across  Good's   orb,    no  orb 
itself.     i2ef.  6:436;  7:105.     C.  1005. 
Evil's,     haplv   evil's   strife   with   good   shall  cease   Never  on 

earth.     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  296.     C.  952. 
Evolutionists.     Evolutionists  !     At     truth     I     glimpse     from 
depths,  you  glance  from  heights.    Fr.  Fu.  6  :  334.     C.  967. 
I    at  the    bottom.    Evolutionists,    Advise    beginning,    rather. 
7->.  Fu.  6  :  336.     C.  968. 
E2:aniple.    Are  these  things  writ  for  no  example,  Sirs  ?   R.  and 
B.  3  :  293.     C.  531. 


EXAMPLES  —  EXPERIENC  E  67 

Examples.      Superabniulant    the   examples   be   To   pick   and 

choose  from.     R.  and  B.  3  :  291.     C.  530. 
mail's  pride  Of  power  to  see,  —  in   failure  and   mistake,  Re- 
linquishment, disgrace,  on  every  side, — Merely  examples. 

/.  Lee  4 :  159.     C.  375. 
Excellence.     'T  is  the  great  gardener  grafts  the  excellence  On 

wildings  where  he  will.     Prince  H.  4  :  375.     C.  G99. 
Excitement.     Thus  was  kept  uj)  excitement  to  the  last,  —  Not 

an  abrupt  out-bolting,  as  of  yore.    R.  and  B.  3  :  4G1.    C.  595. 
Exclusiveness.   the  pretty  perfection  To  which  you  carry  your 

trick  of  exclusiveness.     Chris-Eve  4:3.     C.  317. 
Excuse.     You  disregard  the   excuse,  you  breathe   away  The 

color  of  innocence  and  leave  guilt  black.     R.  and  B.  3  :  184. 

C.  488. 
I  've  tried  What  I  could  say  in  my  excuse,  —  to  show  The 

devil 's  not  all  devil.     Sludge  4  :  256.     C.  412. 
Excuses.     Stripped  bare  all  the  cant-clothed  abuses.  Disposed 

of  sophistic  excuses.     Pacch.  5  :  322.     C.  804. 
Execute.     I  would  execute.  Had  I  but  two  lives  :  one  were 

overworked  !  Ari.  /I.  5  :  118.     C.  636. 
Exemplary.     Duteous,  exemplary,  severe  by  right  —  Moreover 

one  most  thoroughly  beloved.     Red  Cott.  5  :  45.     C.  753. 
Exhausted.     But  nature  sank  exhausted  at  the  close.   R.  and 

B.  3  :  339.     C.  547. 

Exile.     Nowise  an  exile,  —  that  were  punishment,  —  But  one 
our  love  thus  keeps  out  of  harm's  way.      R.  and  B.  3  :  59. 

C.  437. 

Existent.     A  thing  existent  only  while  it  acts.  Does  as  designed, 

else  a  nonentity.     R.  and  B.  3  :  389.     C.  567. 
Expected.     But  who  could  have  expected  this  When  we  two 

drew  together  first.     By  Fire.2  :  63.     C.  186. 
Expense,     while  zeal's  pretence  Is  —  we  do  good  to  men  at  — 

whose  expense  But  ours  ?     Geo.  B.  D.G:  321.     C.  962. 
Experience.     So  wise  men  hold  out  in  each  hollowed  palm  A 
handful  of  experience,  sparkling  fact  They  can't  explain. 
Sludge  4  :  250.     C.  409. 
Experience,  I  am  glad  to  master  soon  or  late.     Fifine  4  :  429. 

C.  728. 
my  own  experience  —  that  is  knowledge,  once  again  !     La  S. 

6  :  63.     C.  853. 
Experience  which  coils  round  and  strangles  quick  Each  hope. 

Joch.  6  :  230.     C.  926. 
Why,  if  God  be  just,  Were  sundry  fellow-mortals  singled  out 

To  undergo  experience.     Bean-St.  6  :  276.     C.  944. 
Another  man's  experience    masters  thine.      Bean-St.  6  :  277. 

C.  944. 
Bearded  experience  bears  not  to  be  duped  Like  boyish  fancy. 
Ger.rfeZ.  6:344.     C.  971. 


G8  EXPLAIN  — EYES 

Explain.     Wliy  should  I  doubt  lie  will  explain  in  time  What  I 
feel  now,  but  fail  to  find  the  words  ?      It.  and  B.  3  :  270. 
C.  524. 
Extemporized.     All  extemporized  As  in  romance-books.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  88.     C.  449. 
Extravagance.      Luxury,    extravagance     Sardanapalus'    self 

might  enuilate.     Red  Cott.  5:51.     C.  755. 
Extremes.     We  two  those  dear  extremes  that  long  to  touch. 

In  a  B.  4  :  140.     C.  3G7. 
Extricating.    How  many  chaste  and  noble  sister-fames  Wanted 

the  extricating  hand.     R.  and  B.  3  -.469.     C.  598. 
Eye.     the  clipped  gray  hair  and  dead  white  face  And  dwindling 
eye  as  if  it  ached  with  guile.     King  V.  1:373.     C.  147. 
It  would  not  be  because  my  eye  grew  dim  Thou  couldst  not 

find  the  love  there.     A7iy  Wife  2  :68.     C.  187. 
no  falcon,  Pole  or  Swede,  Has  got  a  starrier  eye.      A  Blot 

2  :  145.     C.  217. 
with  malicious  eye  Askance  to  watch  the  working  of  his  lie. 

Childe  R.  2  :  330.     C.  287. 
Blue  juvenile  pure  eye  and  pippin  cheek.  And  brow  all  prema- 
turely soiled  and  seamed.     R.  and  B.  3  :  27.     C.  425. 
With  helpful  cheek,  and  eye  Hotly  indignant  now,  now  dewy- 
dimmed.     R.  and  B.  3  :  65.     C.  440. 
guardian   eye  —  Sciutillaut,  rutilant,   fraternal  fire.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  76.     C.  444. 

An  eye  that  roved  was  cured  of  arrogance.     R.  and  B.  3  :  400. 

C.  571. 

With  brow  and  eye  abolished  cut-and-thrust,  Nor  used  the 

vulgar  weapon  !     R.  and  B.  3  :415.     C.  577. 
eye  and  eye  .  .  .  That  swim  as  in  a  sea,  that  dip  and  rise  and 

roll.  Spilling  the  light  around  !     Fifine  4  :  388.     C.  704. 
delicate  ajjproach  Of  eye  askance,  fine  feel  of  finger-tip.    Red 

Cott.  5  :  65.     C.  761. 
Blood  burnt   the   cheekbone,  each   black  eye   flashed   fierce. 

^n.  ^.5:139.     C.  644. 
Who  would  teach  The  brute  man's  tameness  and  intelligence 

Must  never  drop  the  dominating  eye.    Inn  A.  5: 288.    C.  791. 
'Like  you  blue  twinkle,  twiuks  thine  eye,  my  Love  !  '    Cherries 

6  :  265.     C.  939. 
Eye-stare,     the  steady  tension  Of  eye-stare  which  binds  man 

to  beast.     Don.  6  :  197.     C.  912. 
Eyes.     With  her  delicious  eyes  as  clear  as  heaven.     Pau.  1 :  22. 

C.  10. 
clear  smiling  eyes  of  saddest  blue.     Para.  1 :  55.     C.  23. 
Those  fixed  eyes,  quenched  by  the  decaying  body,  Like  torch- 
flame  choked  in  dust.     Para.  1:101.     C.  40. 
With  her  blue  eyes  upturned  As  if  life  were  one  long  and 

sweet  surprise.     P/p/^a  1:356.     C.  140. 


EYES  —  EYEBALLS  69 

Eyes.    Do  their  eves  contract  to  the  earth's  old  scope,  Xow  that 

ihey  see  God  face  to  face  ?     Old  Pict.  2  :  38.     C.  17G. 
Those  deep  dark  eyes  where  pride  demurs  When  pity  would 

be  softening  through.     Last  Ride  2  :  279.     C.  267. 
worn-out  eyes,  or  rather  eve-holes  Of  no  use  now  but  to  gather 

brine.      'Flight  2  :298.     C.  275. 
For  it  was   life    her    eyes   were    drinking.     Flight  2 :  301. 

C.  276. 
thy  sequestered  eyes  Had  noticed,  straying  o'er  the  prayer- 
book's  edge.     R.  and  B.  3  :  55.     C.  435. 
never  disengaging,  once  engaged,  The  thin  clear  gray  hold  of 

his  eyes  on  her.     R.  and  B.  3  :  74.     C.  443. 
You  little  girl,  whose  eyes  do  good  to  mine.    R.  and  B.  3  :  263. 

C.  519. 
The  eyes  with  first  their  twinkle  of  conceit,  Then,  dropped 

to  earth  in  mock-demureness,  —  now.      R.  and  B.  3  :  429. 

C.  582. 
a  wan  pure  look,  wellnigh  celestial,  —  Those  blue  eyes  had 

survived  so  much  !     Chris.-Eve  4t :  19.     C.  323. 
He  pushed  back  higher  his  spectacles.  Let  the  eyes  stream  out 

like  lamps  from  cells.     Chris.-Eve  4  :  19.     C.  323. 
eyes,  born  darkling,  apprehend  amiss.     Death  in  D.  4 :  199. 

C.  388. 
Never  may  eyes  desist,  those  eyes  so  gray  and  grave.  From 

their  slow  sure  supply  of  the  effluent  soul  within  !     Fijine 

4  :  399.     C.  711. 

The  eyes,  for  instance,  unforgettable  Which  ought  to  be,  are 

out  of  mind  as  sight.     Red  Cott.  5  :  20.     C.  744. 
And  here  you  stand  with  those  warm  golden  eyes  !     Ari.  A. 

5  :  134.     C.  642. 

Despite  the  shut  eyes,  the  stopped  ears,  —  by  count  Only  of 
heart-beats,  telling  the  slow  time.     Ari.  A.  o:  239.     C.  681. 

eyes  .  .  .  Not  asleep  now  !  not  pin-points  dwarfed  beneath 
Either  great  bridging  eyebrow.     Inn  A.  5:  277.     C.  787. 

Smilingly  silent  with  fixed  needle-sharp  Much-meaning  eyes. 
Two  Poets  6  :  103.     C.  869. 

Eyes  shall  meet  eyes  and  find  no  eyes  between.     Epil.  Plot-C. 

6  :  267.     C.  940. 

eyes  distent  With  longing  to  reach  Heaven's  gate  left  ajar. 
Inap.  6:400;  7:26.     C.  991. 

Those  sparkling  eyes  .  .  .  (Each  meets  each,  and  the  hawk- 
nose  rules  between).     Imp.  Aug.  6  :427  ;  7:87.     C.  1002. 
Eyeballs.     But  huge  the  eyeballs  rolled  back  native  fire,  Im- 
periously triumphant.     Ari.  A.  5  :  113,     C.  633. 


70  FABLE  — FACE 


P 

Fable,     truth  by  means   Of  fable,  showing  while  it  screens. 

Eas.-Day  4  :  53.     C.  334. 
Since  higiiest  truth,  man  e'er  supplied,   Was  ever  fable  on 

outside.     Eas.-Day  4  :  53.     C.  334. 
Fabric,     the  first  flimsy  word   O'  the   self-spun   fabric  some 

mean  spider-soul  Furnished  forth.   R.  and  B.  3  :  59.    C.  437. 
Face.     Many  a  lighted  face  Foul  with  no  vestige  of  the  grave's 

disgrace.     Sor.  1 :  194.     C.  75. 
He  is  sui-e  to  remember  her  dying  face!      The  Lab.  2:15. 

C.  168. 
Shall  Man,  .  .  .  IVIan's  face,  have  no  more  play  and  action 

Tlian  joy  which  is  crystallized  forever,  Or  grief,  an  eternal 

petrifaction  ?     Old  Pict.  2  :  40.     C.  177. 
She  turns  —  There  's  all  her  wondrous   face  at  once  !      Co- 

lombe  2  :  193.     C.  23G. 
God  makes,  or  fair  or  foul,  our  face.    Count  G.  2  :  235.    C.  252. 
that  woman's  face.  Its  calm  simplicity  of  grace,  Our  Italy's 

own  attitude.     Italian  2  :  254.     C.  259. 
The  face,  accustomed  to  refusings.      Waring  2  :  271.      C.  265. 
As  a  ghost  might  lean  from  a  chink  of  sky,  The  passionate 

pale  lady's  face.     Stat,  and  B.  2  :  327.     C.  285. 
face  ..."  Shaped  like  a  peacock's  egg,  the  pure  as  pearl, 

That  hatches  you  anon  a  snow-white  chick."      R.  and  B. 

3  :  69.     C.  4^41. 

When  first  I  saw  your  face  a  year  ago  I  knew  my  life's  good, 

my  soul  heard  one  voice.     In  a  B.  4::  134.     C.  365. 
face,  like  a  silver  wedge  'Mid  tbe  yellow  wealth.     Gold  Hair 

4  :  166.     C.  377. 

A  face  to  lose  youth  for,  to  occupy  age  With  the  dream  of, 

meet  death  with.     Likeness  4  :  221.     C.  397. 
That  one  Face,  far  from  vanish,  rather  grows,  Or  decomposes 

but  to  recompose.     Epil.  Bra.  P.  4  :  262.     C.  414. 
your  face  fits  into  just  the  cleft  O'  the  heart  of  me.     Fifine 

4:399.     C.  711. 
the  face,  an  evidence  O'  the  soul  at  work  inside.    Fifine  4  :  427. 

C.  726. 
absolute   and   final  face,    Fit   representative   of   soul   inside. 

Red  Cott.  5  :  20.     C.  744. 
the  face,  to  me  One  blur  of  blank.     Red  Cott.  5  :  21.     C.  744. 
that  face  from  which  flowed  beauty.    Ari.  A.  5  :  110.     C.  633. 
I  shall  never  see  that  earnest  face  again  Grow  transparent, 

grow  transfigured  with  the  sudden  light  that  leapt,  At  the 

first   word's    provocation,    from   the    heart-deeps  where   it 

slept.     La  S.G:  58.     C.  851. 
World  —  how  it  walled  about  Life  with  disjrrace  Till  God's 


FACES  — FAIL  71 

own  smile  came  out:  That  was  thy  face  !     Two  Poets  6  :  77. 
C.  859. 
Faces.     .  .  .  Who  summoned  those  cold  faces  that  begun  To 
press  on  me  and  judge  me  ?     Pict.  Ig.  4  :  73.     C.  342. 
tliese  faces  that  seemed  but  now  so  crook'd  And  chiwed  away 
from  God's  prime  purpose.     Fijine  4  :  427.     C.  727. 
Fact.     —  pure  crude  fact  Secreted  from  man's  life  when  hearts 
beat  hard,  And  brains,  high-blooded,  ticked  two  centuries 
since.     R.  and  5.  3  : 2  ;  3  :  3.     C.  415. 
Tlie  untempered  gold,  the  fact  untampered  with.     R.  and  B. 

3:9.     C.  418. 
Fact   this,  and  not  a  dream  o'  the  devil,  Sir  !      R.  and  B. 

3  :  49.     C.  433. 

There  's  the  fact !     It  seems  to  fill  the  universe   with  sight 

And  sound.     R.  and  B.  3  :  190.     C.  490. 
the  first  flash  of  the  fact  alone  To  judge  from,  act  with,  not 

the  steady  lights  Of  after-knowledge.     R.  and  B.  3  :  132. 

C.  467. 
I  played  the  man  as  I  best  might,  bade  friends  Put  non-es- 
sentials by  and  face  the  fact.     R.  and  B.  3  :  171.     C.  482. 
How  miss,  then.  What 's  now  forced  on  you  by  this  flare  of 

fact.     R.  and  B.  3  :  229.     C.  505. 
■whether  a  fact,  .  .  .  truth.  Historic,  not  reduced  to  suit  man's 

mind.     R.  and  B.  3  :  387.     C.  5GG. 
Fact    might   knock    him    o'er    the    mazard.      Pacch.  5 :  319. 

C.  803. 
Fix  fact  fast  :   truths  change  by  an  hour's  revolution.     Fust 

6  :  378.     C.  984. 
reach  where  the  fact  may  lie  Fathom-deep  lower.     Bean-St. 

6  :  275.     C.  943. 
All 's  your  fancy-spinning  !   Here  's  the  fact.    Flute-M.  6  :  421; 

7 : 75.     C.  1000. 
Fact's,     fact's  essence  freed  and  fixed  From  accidental  fancy's 

guardian  sheath.     Dev.  6  :  430  ;  7:  92.     C.  1003. 
Facts.     But  facts  are  facts  and   flinch   not;  stubborn  things. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  56.     C.  436. 
Here  be  facts,   charactery;  what  they  spell  Determine,  and 

thence  pick  what  sense  you  may  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  86.     C.  448. 
His  facts  are  lies:  his  letters  are  the  fact  —  An  infiltration 

flavored  with  himself  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  98.     C.  453. 
Fitlier  men  Would   take  on  tongue  mere  facts  —  fewj  faint 

and  far.  Still  facts  not  fancies.    Ber.  de  M.  6  :  299.    C.  9,54. 
Fade,     learn,  no  fruit,  man's  life  can  bear,  will  fade.     Balau. 

4  :  325.     C.  626. 

Fagon's.     Fagon's  self,  The  French  Court's  pride,  that  famed 

practitioner.     R.  and  B.  3  :411.     C.  575. 
Fail,     a  paradox  Which  comforts  while  it  mocks,  —  Sliall  life 

succeed  in  that  it  seems  to  fail.     Ben  Ezra  4  :  186.     C.  384. 


72  FAIL  — FAITH 

Fail,     nianv  times  men  fail  Perforce  o'  the  little  to  succeed  i' 

the  large.     Inn  A.  5  :2G1.     C.  780. 
Fails.     But    that    somehow    every   actor,    somewhere   in    this 
earthly  scene,  Fails.     La  S.  G  :  60.     C.  852. 

Since  all,  my  life  seemed  meant  for,  fails.  Last  Ride  2  :279. 
C.  207. 

Earth's  question  just  amounts  to  —  which   succeeds,  Which 
fails.     Ari.A.rjiin.     C.  059. 
Failed,     to  his  own  place  hetook  himself  After  the  spring  that 

failed,  — the  wildcat's  way.     R.  and  B.  3  :  97.     C.  452. 
Failure,     there  lurks   Some  innate  and  ine.vplicahle  germ  Of 
failure  in  my  scheme.     Para.  1:.31.     C.  14. 

Then  came  a  slow  And  strangling  failure.  Para.  1:38. 
C.  10. 

I  hardly  tried  now  to  rehuke  the  spring  My  heart  made, 
finding  failure  in  its  scope.     Childe  R.  2  :  331.     C.  287. 

Harhoring  in  the  centre  of  its  sense  A  hidden  germ  of  failure. 
R.  and  B.  3:20.     C.  422. 

Call  failure  folly  !  Mau's  hest  effort  fails.  R.  and  B.  3  :  339. 
C.  547. 

And  finally,  after  this  long-drawn  range  Of  affront  and  failure, 
failure  and  affront.     R.  and  B.  3  :  442.     C.  588. 

In  man  there  's  failure,  only  since  he  left  The  lower  and  in- 
conscious  forms  of  life.     Cleon  4  :  120.     C.  3G0. 

And  what  is  our  failure  here  hut  a  triumph's  evidence  For 
the  fulness  of  the  days  ?     Abt  V.4::  185.     C.  383. 

Only  grant  a  second  life ;  I  acquiesce  In  this  present  life  as 
failure,  count  misfortune's  worst  assaults  Triumph,  not  de- 
feat, assured  that  loss  so  much  the  more  exalts  Gain  ahout 
to  be.    ^La  S.  6  :  60.     C.  855. 

my  soul:  which  sprang  At  love,  and  losing  love  lies  signed 
and  sealed  Failure.     Inn  A.  5  :285.     C.  790. 
Faint.     And  faint,  and  fainter,  and  them  all 's  quite  gone.  Music 

and  light  and  all,  like  a  lost  star.     Straf.  1  :  183.     C.  70. 
Fainting.     The  organ-loft  was  crammed.  Women  were  fainting, 

no  few  fights  ensued.     R.  and  B.  3  :  35.     C.  428. 
Fair,     should  fair  face  accompany  strong  hand.  The  more  com- 
plete equipment.     Pi.,  and  B.  3  :  333.     C.  545. 

That  had  been  fair,  that  might  have  struck  a  man,  Silenced 
the  squabble  between  soul  and  sense.  R.  and  B.  3  :  422. 
C.  580. 

Now,  am  I  fair  or  no  In  what  I  utter  ?  Do  I  state  the  facts. 
Having  forechosen  a  side  ?  R.  and  B.  3  :  60.  C.  437. 
Fairly.  Here  we  alive  must  needs  deal  fairly,  turn  To  what 
account  Man  may  Man's  portion.  Ber.  de  M.  0  :  295. 
C.  9.52. 
Faith,  (iive  but  one  hour  of  my  first  energy.  Of  that  invinci- 
ble faith,  but  only  one  !     Para.  1  :  52.     C.  22. 


FAITH  — FALCON  73 

Faith,     shall  make  Ameiuls  for  faith  now  palsied  at  the  source. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  187.     C.  489. 
You  know  this  is  not  love,  Sirs,  —  it  is  faith,  The  feeling  that 

thei'e  's  God,  he  reigns  and  rules.    R.  and  B.  3  :  215.    C.  500. 
O  faith,  where  art  thou  liown  from  out  the  world  ?     Already 

on  what  an  age  of  doubt  we  fall  !    R.  and  B.  3  :  349.    C.  551. 
As  we  broke  up  that  old  faith  of  the  world,  Have  we,  next 

age,  to  break  up  this  the  new.     R.  and  B.  3 :  397.     C.  570. 
Faith,  in  the  thing,  grown  faith  in  the  report.      R.  and  B. 

3  :  397.     C.  570. 

Entire  faith,  or  else  complete  unbelief  !  Aught  between  has 
my  loathing  and  contempt.     R.  and  B.  3  : 4'iO.     C.  579. 

Who  holds  to  faith  whenever  rain  begins  ?  What  does  the 
father  when  his  son  lies  dead.     R.  and  B.  3  :420.    C.  579. 

And  —  inasmuch  as  faith  gains  most  —  feign  faith  !  R.  and  B. 
3:421.     C.  579. 

a  false  faith  lingered  still.  As  shades  do,  though  the  morning- 
star  be  out.     R.  and  B.  3  :469.     C.  598. 

You  must  mix  some  uncertainty  With  faith,  if  you  would  have 
faith  be.     Chris.-Eve  4  :33.     C.  327. 

faith  is  my  waking  life:  .  .  .  but  waking  's  the  main  point  with 
us  And  my  provision 's  for  life's  waking  part.     Bishop  B. 

4  :  97.     C.  351. 

What 's  midnight  doubt  before  the  dayspriug's  faith  ?  Bishop 
B.  4 :  97.     C.  351. 

If  you  desire  faith  —  then  vou  've  faith  enough.  What  else 
seeks  God  —     Bishop  B.  4  :  lOG.     C.  355. 

the  steadfast  hold  On  the  extreme  end  of  the  chain  of  faith. 
Bishop  B.  4 :  109.     C.  356. 

Inconstancy  means  raw,  't  is  faith  alone  means,  ripe  I'  tlie 
soul  which  runs  its  round.     Fifine  4  :  441.     C.  734. 

The  offspring  of  the  sickly  faith  must  prove  Sickly  act  also. 
Red  Cott.  5  :  69.     C.  762. 

blank  save  o'erhead  one  blue  bit  of  sky  —  Faith.  Inn  A . 
5:281.     C.  788. 

Somehow  our  city's  faith  grows  still  More  and  more  luke- 
warm.    Fil.  Bald.  5  :  388.     C.  827. 

from  this  tohu-bohu  —  hopes  which  dive.  And  fears  which  soar 
—  faith,     /oc/i.  6:231.     C.  926. 

Faith  foolish  as  false  !     Apol.  and F.  6  :290.     C.  950. 

Why  faith  —  but  to  lift  the  load.  To  leaven  the  lump,  where 
lies  Mind  prostrate.     Rev.  6  :439  ;  7: 110.     C.  1006. 
Faithful.     Look  me  in  the  eyes  once  !    Steady  !    Are  you  faith- 
ful now  as  erst  —     Crist,  and  M.  6  :  205.     C.  915. 
Faithfulness,     we  count  In  man  a  miracle  of  faithfulness   If, 

while  unfaithful  somewhat  —     Dan.  Bar.  6  :  309.     C.  958. 
Falcon.     The  falcon  .  .  .  belled  and  beautified  Till  she  believes 
herself  the  Simorgh's  match,     Mihrab  6 :  255. 


74  FALLING  — FAME 

Falling.    Keeps  falling,  nor  Las  reached  the  bottom  yet.    Moses 

6 : 235.     C.  928. 
False.     False  —  from  the  head's  crown  to  the  foot's  sole,  false  ! 

King  C.  1:409.     C.  161. 
False,  I  will  never  —  rash,  I  would  not  be  !     Colomhe  2  :  209. 

C.  242. 
Would   it   were  I  had   been  false,  not  you  !      Worst  4  :  170. 

C.  378. 
Men  tell  me  of  truth  now  —  "  False  !  "  I  cry:  Of  beauty  —  "A 

mask,  friend!     Look  beneath  !  "      Worst  4: :  172.     C.  379. 
How  false  things  are,  I  judge :  how  changeable,  I  learn.     Fi- 

/ne4:418.     C.  721. 
All  false,  all  fleeting  too  !     And  nowhere  things  abide,  And 

everywhere  we  strain  that  things  should  stay.    Fijine  4  :  420. 

C.  723. 
there  exists  A  falsish  false,  for  truth  's  inside  the  same,  And 

truth  that  's  only  half  true,  falsish  truth.     Red  Cott.  5  :  35. 

C.  749. 
false,  Looked  close  at;  but  stand  distant  and  stare  through. 

All 's  absolute  indubitable  truth.    Ari.  A.  5: 156.     C.  651. 
Oh,  this  false   for  real,  This  emptiness  which  feigns  solidity. 

Bean-St.  6  :  277.     C.  944. 
Falsehood.     I  venture  to  put  off  The  wearisome  vest  of  false- 
hood galling  me.     Pora.  1:67.     C.  28. 
What 's  gained  by  falsehood  ?    Tliere  they  stand  Whose  trade 

it  is,  whose  life  it  is  !     How  vain  To  gild  such  rottenness  ! 

Straf.l:lT2.     C.  66. 
Sown    falsehood,  and    thence  reaped  now  scorn,  now  faith. 

Druses  2  :  107.     C.  201. 
armor,  probity,  He    figures  in,   is  falsehood  scale  on  scale. 

R.  ar^d  B.  3  :  367.     C.  558. 
Though  falsehood  escape  in  the  end,  what  boots  ?    How  truth 

would  have  triumphed  !      Worst  4  :  172.     C.  379. 
To  truth  a  pretty  homage  thus  we  pay  By  testifying  —  what 

we  dally  with,  Falsehood,  (which,  never  fear  we   take   for 

truth!)     We  may  enjoy,  but  then  —  how  we  despise  !     Red 

Cott.  5  :  32.     C.  748. 
once   Truth's   banner  unfurled,  Where  's   Falsehood  ?     Sun- 
smitten,  to  nothingness  hurled  !     Fust  6  :  377.     C.  984. 
Falteriugs.     Whose  very  falterings  groundward  come  of  flight 

Urged  by  a  pinion  all  too  passionate.    Prince  H.  4 :  372. 

C.  698. 
Fame.     Ay,  fame,  the  busy  scribe,  will  pause,  no  doubt,  Turn- 
ing a  deaf  ear  to  her  thousand  slaves.     Straf.  1: 184.    C.  71. 
(Lend  my  weak  voice  thy  trump,  sonorous  Fame  !)      Ft.  and 

£.3:324.     C.  542. 
Fame,  —  that  bubble  which,  world-wide  Each  blows  and  bids 

his  neighbor  lend  a  breath.     R.  and  B.  3  :  472.     C.  599. 


FAME  — FANCY'S  75 

Fame.     Each  piece  a  statue  in  the  House  of  Fame  !     Tivo  Poets 

6  :  109.     C.  871. 
Is  fame  so  fickle  that  what  perks  and  preens  .  .  .  flips  Next 

sudden  moment  into  blind  eclipse  ?   Two  Poets  6  :  89.    C.  863. 
Watch   obscuration   of  a  pearl-pure   fame  By  vapory  films, 

enwoven  circumstance.     R.  and  B.  3  :470.     C.  598. 
that   phosphoric  fame  Swathing  blackness'  self  with  bright- 
ness till  putridity  looked  flame.     La  S.  6  ( 73.     C.  858. 
Fame's,     literators  trudging  up  to  knock  At  Fame's  exalted 

temple-door.     Tivo  Poets  6  :  95.     C.  866. 
running,  we  may  reach  fame's  goal  And  wreathe  at  last  our 

brows  with  bay.     Geo.  B.D.6: 321.     C.  962. 
Familiar.     But  that  was  in   the  day-spring;  noon  is  now,  We 

have  got  too  familiar  with  the  light.     R.  and  B.  3  :  395. 

C.  569. 
Family.     God  made  all  the  creatures  and  gave  them  our  love 

and  our  fear.  To  give  sign,  we  and  they  are  his  children, 

one  family  here.     Saul  2  :  48.     C.  180. 
I  leave   the   family  as  unmanageable,  And  stick  to  just  one 

portrait,  but  life-size.     R.  and  B.  3  :  323.     C.  542. 
Famous.     Thronging  through  the  cloud-rift,  whose  are  they, 

the  faces  Faint  revealed  yet  sure  divined,  the  famous  ones 

of  old  ?     Epil.  Fer.  6  :  283.     C.  946. 
Fan.     Teach   me   to   flirt   a   fan    As   the   Spanish  ladies  can. 

Lovers'  Q.  2  :  29.     C.  173. 
Fancy.     Fancy  with  fact  is  just  one  fact  the  more.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  11.     C.  419. 
The  fancy  I  had  to-day.  Fancy  which  turned  a  fear  !      Prol. 

Fifinei-.SS'I.     C.  701. 
—  puzzled  bj^  the  sudden  store  Officious  fancy  plumps  beneath 

my  nose.     Red  Cott.  5:5.     C.  738. 
all  the  good  I  find  in  fancy  is,  it  serves  to  set  Gold's  uimost 

glint  free.     Two  Poets  6  :  111.     C.  872. 
escape  From  my  own  bounded  self  to  some  all-fair  All-^\'ise 

external  fancy.     Joch.  6  :232.     C.  927. 
recognize   no   worth   In  fact  new-born  unless  't  is  rendered 

back  Pallid  by  fancy.     Ger.  de  L.  6:  352.     C.  974. 
Fancy-work.     Mere  fancy-work  of  paint  and  brush  !     Fr.  Fu. 

6:339.     C.  969. 
Fancy's.     How  sad  when  men  have  parted  with  truth's  peace 

For  falsest  fancy's  sake.     Pau.  1:13.     C.  7. 
Most  sad  when  men  have  parted  with  all  joy  For  their  wild 

fancy's  sake.     Pau.  1:13.* 
fancy's    sludge    and   slime   'Twixt    fact's    sound    floor    and 

thought's  mere  surface-growth.     Art.  A.  5  :  138.     C.  643. 
Fancy's  rainbow-birth  Conceived  'mid  clouds  in  Greece.     Ger. 

t?eZ.  6:345.     C.  971. 


76  FANCIES— FATIGUE 

Fancies,  on  such  pile  shall  die  My  lovely  fancies,  with  fair  per- 
islied  things,  Themselves  fair  and  forgotten.  Para.  1:90. 
C.  36. 

Then  fancies  grew  rife  Which  had  come  long  ago.  Saul  2: 52. 
C.  181. 

Fancies  that  broke  through  language  and  escaped.     Ben  Ezra 

4  :  189.     C.  385. 

Oh,  fancies  that  might  be,  oh,  facts  that  are  !     Inap.  6  :  400  ; 

7:'J6.     C.  991. 
Fantasies.     Tlien  a  flash  of  bitter  truth:    So  fantasies  could 

break  and  fritter  youth.     Sor.  1:292.     C.  114. 
Far.     What  is  far  conquers  what  is  near.    Women  and  R.  2  :  85. 

C.  193. 
Fare.     No  such  thin  fare  feeds  flesh  and  blood  like  mine,  No 

such  faint  fume  of  fancy  sates  my  soul.     Ari.  A.  5:120. 

C.  937. 
Fares,     the  citizen's  conceit  How  fares  nobility  while  crossing 

earth.     R.  and  B.  3  :  43.     C.  431. 
Fare"well.     'T  Is  God's  voice  calls:  how  could  I  stay  ?      Fare- 
well!    Pippa  1:357.     C.  141. 
Fashion.     Still  rocheted  and  mitred  more  or  less  ?     Don't  vou 

feel  all  that  out  of  fashion  now  ?    R.  and  B.  3  :  217.    C.  .^Ol. 
Fashion's.     The  Indispensable  to  who  went  clothed  Nor  cared 

encounter  Paris  fashion's  blame.    Red  Cott.  5:44.    C.  753. 
Fasting.     Whose  succulence  makes  fasting  bearable;  Meant  to 

regale  some  moody  splenetic.     R.  and  B.  3  :  329.     C.  543, 
Fate.     The  giant  shades  of  fate,  silently  flitting,  Pile  the  dim 

outline  of  the  coming  doom.     Pau.  1:14.     C.  7. 
Oh,  —  I  give  that  up  !      There  's  fate  in  it :    I  give  all  here 

quite  up.     Straf.  1 :  153.     C.  59. 
Fate  is  tardy  with  the  stage  And  crowd  she  promised.      Sor. 

1:215.     C.  83. 
we  make  acquaintance  with  our  fate  And  find,  fate's  worst 

done,  we,  the  same,  survive.     Ari.  A.  5  :231.     C.  677. 
Your  fate  Is  of  your  choosing :  have  your  choice  !      Inn  A. 

5  :  291.     C.  792. 

Fate's.     Pity  to  disconcert  one  versed  as  you  In  fate's  ill-nature. 

Sor.  1:286.     C.  111. 
fate's  pale  tremulous  foam-flower  tipped  the  gray.      Ari.  A. 

5  :  99.     C.  628. 
Father.     A  father  so  Incensed  with   his  own  child.   Or  must 

have  reason,  or  believe  he  has.     R.  and  B.  3  :  301.     C.  533. 
Mv  Father  was  a  scholar  and  knew  Greek.    Dev.  6  :428;  7:89. 

C.  1002. 
Father's,     father's  apron  still  Sticks  out  from  son's  court-ves- 
ture.    Inn  A.  5  :252.     C.  777. 
Fatigue.     Foot-sore  and  hungry,  dropping  with  fatigue.  They 

reached   by  nightfall   a   poor   lonely  grange.      R.  and  B. 

3:343.     C.  594. 


FAULT  — FEBRUARY  77 

Fault,     why  not  desire,  for  mankind's  sake,  That  if  I  fail,  some 
fault  may  be  the  cause,  That,  though  I  sink,  another  may 
succeed?     Para.  1:50.     C.  21. 
My  life  is  a  fault  at  last,  I  fear.     Life  in  L.  2  :  SO.     C.  192. 
that 's  a  splendid  fault  whereat  we  wink,  Wishing  your  cold 

correctness  sparkled  so  !     R.  and  B.  3  : 5.     C.  416. 
as  God  's  my  judge,  I  see  not  where  my  fault  lies,  that 's  the 

truth  !     R.  and  B.  3  :435.     C.  585. 
The  fault  must  be  repaired  with  energy.      Red  Cott.  5  :34i. 

C.  749. 
The  fault  was  but  folly,  no  fault  of  mine,  or  if  mine,  I  have 
made  amends  !     Mar.  Rel.  6  :117.     C.  875. 
Faults,     the  dead  man  .  .  .  Bear,  bear  him  along,  With  his 
few  faults  shut  up  like  dead  flowerets  !    Saul  2  :48.    C.  180. 
Fine  faults  of  growth,  brave  sins  which  saint  when  shriven 
To  stand  f uU-statured  in  magnificence.      Ber.  de  M.  6  :  295. 
C.  952. 
What  does  Man  see  or  feel  or  apprehend  Here,  there,  and 
everywhere,  but  faults  to  mend.      Fr.  Fu.  6  :335.     C.  967. 
Faultless.     A  faultless  nature  in  a  flawless  form  ?     R.  and  B. 

3 : 324.     C.  542. 

Faultlessness.     why  attach  Blame  to  exhausted  faultlessness, 

no  match  For  fresh  achievement  ?    Chas.  A.Q  :  357.    C.  975. 

Faust.     Oh,  Faust,  why  Faust  ?     Was  not  Elisha  once  ?  —  Who 

bade  them  lay  his  staff  on  a  corpse-face.       R.  and  B.  3  :  18. 

C.  421. 

Favor.     Through  Fortune,  if  you  like,  but  favor  —  no  !      Imp. 

^W5'.  6:426;  7:84.     C.  1001. 

Favoritism.     But  times  are  changed  and  nephews  out  of  date 

And  favoritism  unfashionable.      R.  and  B.  3  :  101.     C.  454. 

Fear.     Shutting  out  fear  with  all  the  strength  of  hope.      Para. 

1:62.     C.  26. 

Not  the  least  look  of  fear  in  that  broad  brow  —  One  not  to 

be  disposed  of  by  surprise.     R.  and  B.  3  :96.     C.  452. 
path  of  life.  Built  round  about  and  over  against  by  fear.      R. 

and  B.  3  :  123.     C.  463. 
As  if  in  answer  to  the  unspoken  fear.  R.  and  B.  3  :  272.    C.  522. 
a  fresh  enhancing  shiver  of  fear.     Chris.-Eve  4  :  11.     C.  320. 
there  's  more  earnest  in  His  fear  than  you  conceive:    I  know 

the  man  !     In  a  B.  4:  :  149.     C.  371. 
who  can  hold  Fast  a  boy  in  a  frenzy  of  fear  !     Ivan  6  :  135. 
C.  883. 
Fears.     Give  hopes  alike  and  fears  a  breathing-while.     R.  and 

B.  3:336.     C.  546. 
Feast.     Our  little  vearly  lovesome  frolic  feast.       R.  and  B. 

3  :  279.     C.  525" 
February,     sitting  out  the  dim  Droop  of  a  sombre  February 
day  In  the  plain  closet.     R.  and  B.  3  :  28.     C.  425, 


78  FEEL  — FIDELITY 

Feel.     I  feel,  am  what  I  feel,  know  what  I  feel;  So  much  is 

truth  to  me.     Sor.  1:316.     C.  124. 
A  fairy-tale  !     Only  —  I  feel  it  !     Nat.  Mag.  5  :  346.     C.  812. 
Feels.     Out  of  Ili.s  reach,  that  feels  nor  joy  nor  f^rief,  Since 

botli  derive  from  weakness  in  some  way.     Caliban  4 :  210. 

C.  393. 
Feeling,     feeling,  the  East's   gift,   Is   quick  and   transient  — 

conies,  and  lo,  is  gone.     Luria  2  :402.     C.  315. 
Feelings.     These  are  feelings  it  is  not  good  to  foster.     Flight 

2  :  306.     C.  278. 
Feet,     through  a  world  which  brings  me  back  Ever  thus  fruit- 
lessly to  tind  your  feet.     Numph.  5  :348.     C.  813. 
Feign.     Would  not  begin   the  lie  that  ends  with  truth,   Nor 

feign  the  love  that  brings  real  love  about.    R.  and  B.  3  :435. 

C.  585. 
To  feign,  means  —  to  have  grace  And  so  get  gratitude  !     Fl- 

A«e  4:421.     C.  723. 
Feigned,     feigned  love,  false  allurement,  fancied  fact.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  332.     C.  545. 

Feigning.     Feigning,  —  the  liker  innocence  to  guilt.  The  truer 
to  the  life  in  what  she  feigns  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  332.     C.  545. 
feigning  everywhere  grows  fact,  Professors  turn  possessors. 
R.  and  B.  3:4:17.     C.  578. 

Felippa.     a  little  black-eyed  pretty  singing  Felippa,  gay  silk- 
winding  girl.     Pippa  1 :  363.     C.  143. 

Felon.     Lo,  the  first  ray  protruded  on  those  five  !     It  reached 
them,  and  each  felon  writhed  transfixed.     R.  and  B.  3  :  15. 

C.  420. 

Felons,     they  were  felons  that  Law  failed  to  clutch.     R.  and 

i^.  3:298.     C.  532. 
Fern-ranks.     The  fern-ranks  like  a  forest  spread  themselves. 

Pan.  1:19.     C.  9. 
Festa-day.     Sure  that  to-morrow  would  be  festa-day.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  258.     C.  517. 

Fester.     This  plague-seed  set  to  fester  his  sound  flesh.     R. 

and  B.  3:^7.     C.  432. 
Fetters.     If  fetters,  not  a  few,  .  .  .  fall  from  me,  .  .  .  These 

shall  I  bid  men  .  .  .  Also  God-guided  —  bear,  and  gayly 

too?     Why  6 -.388.     C.  948. 
Few.     Then,  for  the  few  that  rise  to  the  new  height,  The  many 

that    must    sink    to   the  old   depth.      R.   and   B.   3 :  397. 

C.  570. 

Fiction.      Soul  —  too   weak,   forsooth.   To   cope   with   fact  — 
wants  fiction  everywhere  !     Bean-St.  6  :  278.     C.  944. 
No  warrant  for  the  fiction  I,  as  fact,  Had  treasured  in  my 
heart  and  soul  so  long.     Dev.  6  :430;  7:92.     C.  1003. 

Fidelity.     Fidelity,  disinterestedness,  Excuse  so  much  !      Co- 
lombe  2  :  199.     C.  238. 


i 


FIELD  — FIRE  79 

Field,     the  field  .  .  .  all  its  growth  unsheaved  Of  emerald  lu- 

zern  bursting  into  bhie.     Red  Cott.  5:1.     C.  737. 
Fiend.     Tlie  very  angel's  self  made  foul  i'  the  face  By  the 

fiend  who  struck  there.     R.  and  B.  3  :273.     C.  523. 
Fiend-faces.     Horrified,  hideous,  frank  fiend-faces  !     Ned  B. 

6  :  144.     C.  888. 
Fierce.     Harsh  and  fierce  of  word,  rough  and  savage  of  deed, 
Hated  or  feared  the  more  —  who  knows  ?      Hal.  and  Hob 
6:128.     C.  879. 
Fight.     Let  them  fight  it  out,  friend  !     things  have  gone  too 
far.     Before  2 -.SQ.     C.  193. 
First  we  figlit  for  faiths,  But  get  to  shake  hands  at  the  last 
of  all:  Mine  's  your  faith  too.     R.  and  B.  3  :  446.     C.  589. 
Fighter.      an  old  bruised  and  battered  year-bj'-year  Fighter 
with  fortune,  not  a   penny   in  poke.      it.  and   B.  3 :  151. 
C.  474. 
gives   earth  spectacle   Of  a  brave  fighter  who   succumbs  to 
odds  that  turn  defeat  to  victory.    R.  and  B.  3  :  443.     C.  588. 
I  was  ever  a  fighter,  so,  —  one  fight  more,  The  best  and  the 
last  !     Prospice  4  :  216.     C.  395. 
Fighting,     such  love  Of  fighting  somehow  still  for  fighting's 
sake.     Pri7ice  H.  4  :367.     C.  696. 
He  ruled  his  life-long,  and,  when  time  was  ripe,  Died  fight- 
ing for  amusement.     Ari.  A.  5  :171.     C.  656. 
as  if  praise  Were  gained  by  simple  fighting  nowadays  !      Two 
Poets  6 -.97.     C.  867. 
Figure.     Her  figure  ?     somewhat  small  and  darling-like.     Red 

Cott.  5  :  20.     C.  743. 
Filth.     Set  at  this  gullv-hole  o'  the  world's  discharge  To  help 
the  f  riglitf  ullest  of  filth  have  vent.    R.  and  B.  3  :  81.    C.  446. 
What's  filth,  —  unless  who  does  it,  thinks  it  so?      Ari.  A. 
5:232.     C.  677. 
Find.     Where  I  find  her  not,  beauties  vanish.     Flower^s  2  : 9. 
C.  166. 
Heart,  fear  nothing,  for,  heart,  thou  shalt  find  her.     Love  in 

i.  2:80.     C.  191. 
Because  there  were  no  documents  to  find  In  my  presence,  — 
you  must  hide  before  you  find.    R.  and  B.  3  :226.     C.  504. 
Finish.     Only,  do  finish  something  !     Sor.  1 :  255.     C.  99. 
Finished,     but  nothing  baffled  me,  so,  ill  Or  well,  the  work  is 

finished.     Rudel  4  :  123.     C.  361. 
Fire,     a  fire  which  a  few  discern.  And  a  very  few  feel  biu'n. 
Lovers' Q.  2 -.28.     C.  173. 
How  all  is  changed:  the  fire  that  fed  on  earth  Now  towers  to 

heaven  !     Liiria  2  :392.     C.  311. 
A  final  belch  of  fire  like  blood.     Eas.-Day  4  :45.     C.  331. 
spurred  on  to  brave   necessity,  expend  All  life  left,  in  one 
flash,  as  fire  does  at  its  end.     Fijine  4  :  402.     C.  712. 


80  FIRE  —  FLATTERY 

Fire.     Doomed  to  die,  —  Fire  should  have  flung  a  passion  of 

embrace  About  thee.     Ari.  A.  5  :99.     C.  628. 
Ashes  be  evidence  how  fire  —  with  smoke  —  All  night  went 

lamping  on  !     Ari.  A.  5  :232.     C.  678. 
Fire  is  in  the  flint:  true,  once  a  spark  escapes  Fire  forgets 

the  kinship.     Epil.  Sun  6  :2.j2.     C.  934. 
Firebrand.     That  was  a  firebrand  at  each  fox's  tail  Unleashed 

in  a  cornfield:  soon  spread  flare  enough.     R.  and  B.3:6. 

C.  416. 
Firm.     He  's  good,  we  knew  long  since  —  wise,  we  discover  — 

Firm,  let  us  hope:     Kifig  C.  1:393.     C.  loo. 
such  a  spirit  Shall  hold  the  path  from  which  our  stanchest 

broke,  Stand  firm  where  every  famed  precursor  fell  ?     Lu- 
rid 2  :  365.     C.  300. 
First.     O  God,  I  sliall  die  first  —  I  shall  die  first !    Straf.  1 :  192. 

C.  74. 
The  first  of  the  new,  in  our  race's  story,  Beats  the  last  of  the 

old.     Old  Pict.  2 -Al.     cm. 
The  first  step,  I  am  master  not  to  talce.     Bishop  B.  4 :  108. 

C. 356. 
Fish.  —  Either  because  of  1X0T2  which  means  Fish  And  very 

aptly  symbolizes  Cluist.     B.  and  B.  3  :  358.     C.  554. 
"  Whv,  Father,  is  the  net  removed  ?  "    "  Son,  it  hath  caught  i 

the  fish."     Pope  and  N.  6:4.02;  7  :  M.     C.  992.  f. 

Fist.     He  feels  he  has  a  fist,  then  folds  his  arms  Crosswise  and 

makes  his  mind  up  to  be  meek.     R.  and  B.  3  :  22.      C.  423. 
God  Laid  down  the  law:  gave  man  the  brawny  arm  And  ball 

of  fist.     R.  and  B.  3  :434.     C.  585. 
Fit.     Who  knows  what 's  fit  for  us  ?   Last  Ride  2  :  281.    C.  268. 
Fixes.-    fashions  the  clay  no  love  will  change.  And  fixes  a  beauty 

never  to  fade.     Stat,  and  B.  2  :  326.     C.  285. 
Flag.     Tlie  flag  stuck  on  a  heap  of  bones,  A  soldier's  doing  ! 

what  atones  ?     Last  Ride  2  :  280.     C.  268. 
Flame.     When  flame  fell  silently  from  cloud  to  cloud,  Richer 

than  that  gold  snow  Jove  rained  on  Rhodes.     R.  and  B, 

3  :  12.     C.  419. 
a  flame.  Was  never  nursed  by  temperance  or  health.     Ari.  A. 

5  :  113.     C.  633. 
Fresh  bathed  i'  the  icebrook,  any  hand  may  pass  A  placid 

moment   through  the  lamp's  fierce  flame.     Ari.  A.  5  :  164. 

C.  654. 
Flashed.    The  chief's  eye  flashed;  but  presently  Softened  itself, 

as  sheathes  A  film  the  mother-eagle's  eye.     Incident  2  :  232. 

C.  251. 
Flatter.     They  feign,  they  flatter;  nowise  does  it  skill.     R.  and 

713:442.     C.  588. 
Flattery.     Have  you  stooped  For  your  own  ends  to  bestialize 

yourself  By  flattery  of  a  fellow.    R.  and  B.  3  :  429.    C.  583. 


FLAW  — FLOWER  81 

Flaw.     As  where  shall  want  its  flaw  mere  human  stuff  ?     Ari. 

A.  5:165.     C.G50. 
Flavys.     It   were   to  be  wished   the  flaws  were  fewer  In  the 

earthen  vessel  .  .  .  But  the  main  tiling  is,  does  it  hold  good 

measure?     Chris.-Eve  4:  :30.     C.  32G. 
Flesh,     flesh  leaves  soul  free  to  range.     Sor.  1 :  224.     C.  87. 
To  him,  the  Flesh  meant  silver  and  gold.     Her.  I'rag.  2  :  315. 

C.  281. 
Sudden  the  weak  flesh  fell  like  piled-up  cards,  All  the  frail 

fabric  at  a  finger's  touch.     R.  and  B.  3  :  93.     C.  451. 
lest  the  mind  Come  all  uncandid  through  the  thwarting  flesh  ! 

R.and  B.^'.^'IS.     C.  543. 
pricks  on  the  soul  to  shoot  New  fire  into  the  half-used  cinder, 

flesh  !     R.  and  B.  3  :426.     C.  581. 
fitter  spirit  should  subserve    The  flesh,  than  flesh   refine   to 

nerve  Beneath  the  spirit's  play.     Eas.-Day  4  :  47.     C.  332. 
inquisitive  how  pricks  and  cracks  Befall  the  flesh  through  too 

much  stress  and  strain.     Karshish  4  :  64.     C.  338. 
lift  them  over  it,  ignore  it  all,  Make  them  forget  there  's  such 

a  thing  as  flesh.     Fra  Lippo  4  :  78.     C.  344. 
"  All  good  things  Are  ours,  nor  soul  helps  flesh  more,  now, 

than  flesh  helps  soul ! "     Ben  Ezra  4  :  187.     C.  384. 
With  flesh,  that  hath  so  little  time  to  stay,  And  yields  mere 

basement  for  the  soul's  emprise.  Expect  prompt  teaching. 

Death  in  D.  4  :  197.  C.  388. 
So,  the  head  aches  and  the  limbs  are  faint !     Flesh  is  a  bur- 
den.    Epil.  Mihrah  6  :256.     C.  936. 
Flogged.    I  did  not  turn  cheek  and  take  pleasantry.  But  flogged 

while  skin  could  purple.     Ari.  A.  5  :137.     C.  643. 
Florence.     Because  of  a  crime,  which  may  God  requite  !     To 

Florence  and  God  the  wrong  was  done.    Stat,  and  B.  2  :  322. 

C.  284. 
And  so  is  Florence,  —  the  unseen  sun  above.     Luria  2  :  384. 

C.  308. 
Floridity.     to-morrow  I  review  mv  piece.  Tame  here  and  there 

undue  floridity.     R.  and  B.  3  :318.     C.  540. 
Flower.     Too  costly  a  flower  were  this,  I  see  it  now,  To  pluck 

and  set  upon  my  barren  helm.     Colomhe  2  :  230.     C.  250. 

—  like  Shushan's  flower  besought  By  over-curious  handling 
to  unloose.     Joch.  6  :  230.      C.  926. 

—  not  one  flower  of  all  he  said  and  did.  Might  seem  to  flit  un- 
noticed, fade  unknown.     R.  and  B.  3  :278.     C.  525. 

The  marvel  of  a  soul  like  thine,  earth's  flower  She  holds  up 
to  the  softened  gaze  of  God  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  378.     C.  562. 

Maybe  !  flower  that 's  full-blown  tempts  the  butterfly,  not 
flower  that 's  furled.     La  S.  6  :58.     C.  851. 

Flower  o'  the  broom.  Take  away  love,  and  our  earth  is  a  tomb  ! 
Fra  Lippo  4  :  75.     C.  342. 


82  FLOWER  — FOOL 

Flower.     (Flower  o*  the  peach,  Death  for  us  all,  and  his  own 

lito  for  each  !)     Fra  Lippo  4  :  79.     C.  3-i4. 
Flower's.     'T  is   just   a   flower's  fate:   past  parterre  we  trip, 
Till  peraclventure  some  one  plucks  our  sleeve.     R.  and  B. 
3:G9.     C.  441. 
Flowers.    All  the  face  composed  of  flowers,  we  say.    Pretty  W. 
2  :  77.     C.  190. 
the  white  humid  faces  upturned  by  the  flowers.     jSauZ2:58. 

C.  184. 
Do  not  the  dead  wear  flowers  when  dressed  for  God  ?    R.  and 

iJ.  3:278.     C.  525. 
Each  of  us,  in  flowers  Chooses   his   love,  allies  it  with  past 
hours.     Bea.  Sig.  G  :415;  7:64.     C.  997. 
Flutter,     prolong   tliereby    The  not-unpleasant   flutter  at   the 

breast.     R.  and  B.  3  :  20.     C.  422. 
Foe.     claws  that  scratch,  shows  feline  teeth  ;  A  formidabler  foe 
than  I  dare  fret.     R.  and  B.  3  :  266.     C.  520. 
Against  a  foe,  pollent  in  potencj\    R.  and  B.  3  :305.    C.  535. 
Foes.     'Tis   worth   wliile,  .  .  .  having  foes  like  mine  Just  for 

the  bliss  of  crushing  them.     Straf.  1:165.     C.  63. 
Fog.     fog  You  might  cut  as  an  axe  chops  a  log  —  Like  so  much 
wool  for  color  and  bulkiness.     Flight  2  :  297.     C.  274. 
grown  double  their  size  In  the  natural  fog  of  the  good  man's 
mind.     Chris.-Eve  4.:6.     C.  318. 
Foiled,     foiled  darings,  fond   attempts  back-driven.     Ber.  de 

jl/.  6:295.     C.  952. 
Fold.     Be  a  god  and  hold  me  With  a  charm  !     Be  a  man  and 

fold  me  With  thine  arm  !      Woman's  2  :23.     C.  171. 
Follow.     What 's  the  adage  rife  in  man's  mouth?    Why,  "  The 
best  I  both  see  and  praise,  the  worst  I  follow."   La  S.  6  :  71. 
C.  857. 
Folly.     Earth's  returns  For  whole  centuries  of  folly,  noise  and 
sin!     Love  2 -.21.     C.  112. 
How  I  see  all  my  folly  at  a  glance  !    R.  and  B.  3  :  407.    C.  574. 
Folly  and  pride  o'ercame  my  heart.    Chris.-Eve  4  :  11.    C.  320. 
understanding  delves  And  drops  each  germ,  what  else    but 
folly  thwarts  The  doer's    settled    purpose  ?      Ber.  de  M. 
6  :  298.     C.  953. 
Food,     food  more  real  Than  fruit  plucked  off  the  cobwebbed 

family-tree.     R.  and  B.  3  :48.     C.  433. 
Fool.     Fool,  fool !  this  is  the  heart  grown  sorrow-proof.     Para. 
1:101.     C.  40. 
so  a  fool  finds  mirth.  Makes  a  thing  and  then  mars  it,  till  his 

mood  Changes.       CJdlde  R.  2  :  334:.     C.  288. 

The  all-exacting,  naught-enduring  fool.    Luria  2  :385.    C.  308. 

Wlio  cut  the  conscious  figure  of  a  fool.  Changed  countenance, 

dropped  bashful  gaze  to  ground.    R.  and  B.  3  :24.    C.  424. 

which   bird    o'  the   brace   Decoyed  the  other  into  clapnet  ? 


FOOL  — FOOT  83 

Who  Was  fool,  who  knave  ?     Neither  and  both.     R.  and  B. 

3:117.     C.  460. 
Pool,     you  fool,  for  all  Your  lore  !     D'lS.  Al.  4  :  176.     C.  380. 
Beside,  is  he  the  only  fool  in   the  world  ?      Sludge  4  :  257. 

C.  412. 
what  remains  But  that  I  straightway  curse,   cuff,  kick  the 

fool !     Sun  6 :  252.     C.  934. 
'Tis  plain:  this  pair  of  old  pretentious  fools  Meant  to  fool  me: 

it  happens,  I  fooled  tliem.     R.  and  B.  3  :  429.     C.  583. 
Fool-like.     Fool !     And,  fool-like,  what  is  it  I  wander  from  ? 

R.and  B.^-A<dS.     C.  574. 
Fool's-face.     One  more  enlarged   distorted   false   fool's-face. 

R.andB.     3:472.     C.  599. 
Fools,     fools  who  do  first  wrong,  then  pour  the  blame  Of  their 

wrong-doing,  Satan-like,  on  Job.    R.  and  B.  3  :  22.    C.  423. 
You  blind  guides  who  must  needs  lead  eyes  that  see  !     Fools, 

alike  ignorant  of  man  and  God  !    R.  and  B.  3  :  229.    C.  505. 
We  fools  dance  through  tlie  cornfield  of  this  life.  Pluck  ears 

to  left  and  right  and  swallow  raw.   R.  and  B.  3  :  396.    C.  570. 
Fools  we  are,  how  we  learu  things  when  too  late  !     R.  and  B. 

3:407.     C.  574. 
Were  not  they  fools  to  the  height,  Fools  to  the  depth,  fools  to 

the  level  between,  O'  the  foolishness  set  to  decide  the  case  ? 

/?.  a?irf5.  3:442.     C.  588. 
Since  talk  no  more  means  torture.     Fools —  what  fools  These 

wicked  men  are  !     Inn  A.  o  :  313.     C.  801. 
Once  planted  as  fools  —  no  departing  From  folly  one  inch. 

Pacch.  5:329.     C.  806. 
Only  fools  command  When  folks  are  free  to  disobey  them. 

two  Poets  6  :  98.     C.  867. 
your  art  of  making  fools  subserve  the  man  of  mind  !      Pietro 

6:170.     C.  900. 
Foolish.     Foolish,  the  love-fit  ?     Let  me  prove  it  such  Like 

vou,  before  like  you  I  puff  things  clear  !    R.  and  B.  3  :427. 

C.  582. 
"  So  say  the  foolish  !  "     Say  the  foolish  so,  Love  ?      Poetics 

6:393;  7:10.     C.  988. 
And  if  men  prefer  to  be  foolish.  Ourselves  have  proved  horse- 
like not  mulish.     Pacch.  5  :  327.     C.  805. 
Foolisher.     One  makes  fools  look  foolisher  fifty-fold  By  put- 
ting in  their  place  men  wise  like  you.     ii.  a«rf  5.  3  :  422. 

C.  580. 
Foolishness.     A  man  is  fettered  by  the  foolishness  He  took 

for  wisdom  and  talked  ten  years  since.     R.  and  B.  3  :  331. 

C.  544. 
Foot.     A  cherishing  there  is  of  foot  and  knee,  A  chafing  loose- 
skinned  large-veined  hand  with  hand.     R.  and  B.  3  :  28. 

C.  425. 


84  FOOT-WASHER  — FORTNIGHT 

Foot-washer.     And    born    foot-washer    and    foot-wiper,  nay 

Foot-kisser  to  each  comrade  of  you  all  !     R.  and  B.  3 :  344. 

C.  549. 
Foothold-rise.      The  little  foothold-rise  allowed  mankind  To 

mount  on  and  thence  guess  the  sun's  survey.      Camel-D. 

6:259.     C.  937. 
Foppery,     judge  if  a  mere  foppery  Pricks  on  my  speaking  ! 

Eus.-Day^-.Z'd.     C.  329. 
Forbearance.      Forbeaiiuice,   then     repulsion,    then    disdain. 

iVumyjA.  5:348.     C.  813. 
Force.     By  the  convincing-  good  old-fashioned  method  Of  force 

—  by  sheer  compulsion.     Para.  1:12.     C.  29. 
So,  force    is    sorrow,  and   each    sorrow,  force.       Ttoo  Poets 

6  :  112.     C.  873. 
Foreign.     A  sparkling  foreign  country,  wonderful  To  the  sea's 

edge  for  gloom  and  gloss.     J .  Lee  4  :  160.     C.  375. 
Foresa^w.     Well,  it  is  over,  ends  as  I  foresaw.      R.  and  B. 

3:467.     C.  597. 
Foretaste,     got  foretaste  too  Of  better  life  beginning  where 

this  ends.     R.  and  B.  3  :  274.     C.  523. 
Forever.     He  said,  "  What 's  time  ?     Leave  Now  for  dogs  and 

apes  !     Man  has  Forever."     Gram.  Fun.  2  :  311.     C.  280. 
Forget.      Forget  distemperature  aud  idle  heat !      R.  and  B. 

3  :  235.     C.  508. 
And  so  more  da3S,  more  deeds  I  must  forget.      R.  and  B. 

3:263.     C.  519. 
Forgetfulness.     Forgiveness  ?     rather   grant    Forgetfulness  ! 

The  past  is  past  and  lost.     Camel-D.  6  :  259.     C.  937. 
Forgivable.     Say,  he  was  maddened,  so  forgivable  !   R.  and  B. 

3:423.     C.  580. 
Forgive.     So,  she  'd  efface  the  score,  And  forgive  me  as  before. 

Lovers'  Q.  2:^1.     C.  174. 
He  thought  I  could  not  properly  forgive  Unless  I  ceased  for- 
getting, —  which  is  true.     R.  and  B.  3  :  251.     C.  514. 
Thou   wilt   pretend   the    Church's  interest,  Ignore   all   finer 

reasons  to  forgive  !     R.  and  B.  3  :'iQO.     C.  571. 
God  forgives:  Forgive  you,  delegate  of  God.     Inn  A.  5:287. 

C.  791. 

Good,  to  forgive;    Best,  to  forget !      Living,  we  fret;  Dying, 

we  live.     La  S.6: 53.     C.  849. 
Formidable.     Who  doubts  that,  with  a  weapon  to  brandish,  a 

man  is  the  more  formidable  ?     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  357.     C.  297. 
Forsake.     Forsake  the  Christ  thou  sawest  transfigured,  Him 

Who  trod  the  sea  and  brought  the  dead  to  life  ?     Death  in 

D.  4  :  198.     C.  388. 

Forthrights.     taught,  by  fo-rthrighte  not   meanderings.      Dev. 

6:430;  7:93.     C.  1003. 
Fortnight.     A   whole   long  fortnight :  in  a  life  like  mine  A 


1 


FORTUNE  — FREE  85 

fortnight  filled  with   bliss  is   long  and  much.     R.  and  B. 

3 : 275.     C.  524. 
Fortune.     Marching  to  fortune,  not  surprised  by  her.     Colombe 

2  :  215.     C.  244. 
The  ducat,  spendthrift  fortune  thought  to  fling  For  a  scram- 
ble just  to  make  the  mob  break  shins  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  72. 

C. 442. 
Bit  by  bit  thus  made-up  mosaic-wise,  Flat  lay  my  fortune, — 

tessellated  floor.     R.  and  B.  3  :  1G5.     C.  480. 
Had   but  fortune  favored,  bidden  each  shy  faculty  advance. 

Za  5.6:60.     C.  852. 
Fortune  .  .  .  blew  Some  slight  bark's  sails  to  bellying,  mauled 

and  marred  And  forced  to  put  about  the  First-rate  !     Tioo 

Poets  6  :  111.     C.  872. 
Fortunate.      Ah,   fortimate    (the  poet's  word  reversed)  Inas- 
much  as   we   know   our   happiness  !      R.    and   B.    3  :  287. 

C.  528. 
Forty,     we  critics  dare  not  give  ofPenee  To  grandees  like  the 

Forty.     Two  Poets  6  :  95.     C.  866. 
Are  Forty  wagging  beards  worth  one  girl's  smile  ?     Two  Poets 

6  :  100.     C.  868. 
'Forty -nine.    On  the  Christmas-Eve  of  'Forty-nine.    Chris.-Eve 

4:4.     C.  317. 
Forward.     Move  forward,  well  assured  that  move  you  may  : 

Where   you    mistrust    advance,   stop   short,    there    stick  ! 

Red  Cott.  5  :  27.     C.  746. 
Fought.     Have  not  we  fought,  bled,  left  our  martyr-mark  At 

every  point   along  the  boundary -line?      R.atid  B.  3  :  391. 

C.  567. 
Umvise  I  fought !    That 's  three.     Joch.  6  :  214.     C.  919. 
Found,     the  lost  so  long,  the  found  So  late,  the  lady  of  my  life. 

/Mn^.5:288.     C.  791. 
Founds.     He  founds  no  anti-school,  upsets  no  faith.  Bat,  living, 

lets  live,  the  good  easy  soul.     Ari.  A.  5  :  159.     C.  652. 
Frailty.     What  's    their   frailty  beside    our    own    falsehood  ? 

Pacch.  5  :  322.     C.  803. 
Frame-work.     Beamy  the   world,  yet   a   blank  all   the  same, 

—  Framework  which  waits  for  a  picture  to  frame.     Wanting 

6  :  193.     C.  911. 
France.     O  pleasant  land  of  France  !     Fifine  4  :  384.     C.  702. 
Fray.     But  to  a  fray,  you  see,  Two  parties  go.    R.  and  B.  3  :  52. 

C.  434. 
Free.     —  let  the  free  Bestow  their  life-blood,  thou  art  pulseless 

now  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  210.     C.  498. 
So   free   w^e   seem,  so  fettered  fast  we  are  !     Andrea  4 :  84. 

C.  346. 
They  told  him  he  was  free  As  air  to  walk  abroad.     "  How 

otherwise  ?  "  asked  he.     Ivan  6  :  141.     C.  886. 


86  FREEDOM  —  FRIENDS 

Freedom.     I,    Who   live,   love,   labor   freely,   nor   discuss   A 

brother's  right  to  freedom.     WIu/  G  :  388.    C.  948. 
French.     Records,  quotha?     Why,  the  French    burned  them, 

wliat  else  do  the  French  ?     The  rap-and-rending  nation  ! 

It.  and  B.  3  :  10.     C.  418. 
Friend.    My  solitary  luxury,  my  one  friend.    Pora.liGl.    C.  28. 
I  liave  no  friend  in  the  wide  world.    Kmg  C.  1  :411.     C.  162. 
One  friend  in  that  path  '  shall  be,  To  secure  my  step  from 

wrong.     Serenade  2  :  74.     C.  190. 
thine  eye,  Thy  form,  are  too  nmeh  as  they  were  —  my  friend 

Hadsiich  !     Druses  2  :  132.     C.  211. 
what  shall  now  convince  My  inmost  heart  I  have  a  friend  ? 

Italian  2  :  255.     C.  259. 
Men  take  pains  to  preserve  a  tree-stump,  even.  Whose  boughs 

they   played   beneath  —  much   more   a  friend.     Soul's  Tr. 

2  :  342.     C.  291. 
"  You  call  me  '  friend  : '  save  my  true  friend  !     Save  him,  or 

lose  me  !  "     SouVs  Tr.  2  :  345.     C.  292. 
who  either  was  a  friend,  Or  a  friend's  friend,  or  friend's  friend 

thrice-removed.     R.  and  B.  3  :  91.     C.  450. 
If  God  yet  have  a  servant,  man  a  friend.  The  weak  a  savior, 

and  the  vile  a  foe.     R.  and  B.  3  :  258.     C.  517. 
The  heart  and  its  immeasurable  love  Of  my  one  friend,  my 

only,  all  my  own.     R.  and  B.  3  :  277.     C.  524. 
a  husband  had  a  friend,  which  friend  Seemed  to  him  over- 
friendly  with  his  wife.     R.  and  B.  3  :  313.     C.  538. 
having  but  one  stay  in  this  extreme.  Out  of  the  wide  world 

but  a  single  friend.     R.  and  B.  3  :  330.     C.  544. 
How  can  a  dead  hand  give  a  friend  a  lift  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  453. 

C.  592. 
Friend,  whom    T  love  the  best  in  the  whole  world.     Inn  A. 

5 : 274.     C.  786. 
accept    one    last   f riend's-word,  —  your   friend's,   All   men's 

friend,  save  a  felon's.     Inn  A.  5  :294.     C.  794. 
Hush,  I  prav  you  !     What  if  this  friend  happen  to  be  —  God  ? 

Fears  5: 345.     C.  811. 
Friend-like.     AVe   two  stood  simply  friend-like  side  by  side. 

Inap.  6:399  ;  7:26.     C.  991. 
Friends,     it  should  seem  Imjiossible  for  me  to  fail,  so  watched 

By  gentle  friends  who  made  my  cause  their  own.    Para.  1 :  41. 

C.  18. 
were  I  lucky  in  a  glut  of  friends.     Para.  1  :  67.     C.  28. 
friends   used   to  wait   His   coming,  zealous    to   congratulate. 

Sor.  1:221.     C.  86. 
Yet  I  will  but  say  what  mere  friends  say.  Or  only  a  thought 

stronger.     Lost  Mis.  2  :  20.     C.  170. 
Mere  friends  are  we,  —  well,  friends  the  merest  Keep  much 

that  I  resign.     Lost  Mis.  2  :  20.     C.  170. 


FRIENDS  — FULCRUM  87 

Friends,     a  shaft  from  the  devil's  bow  Pierced  to  our  ingle- 
glow,  And  the  friends  were  friend  and  foe!    Lovers^  Q.  2  :29. 
C.  173. 
Friends  —  lovers   that   might     have    been.      By   Fire.  2  :  65. 

C.  187. 
In  no  point  has  this  stranger  failed  his  friends.     Luria  2  :  3G2. 

C.  299. 
But  many  more,  who  found  they  were  old  friends,  Pushed  in 
to  have  their  stare  and  take  their  talk  And  go  forth  boast- 
ing of  it  and  to  boast.     R.  and  B.  3  :G9.     C.  441. 
friends   Then   proud  to  cap  and  kiss  their  patron's  shoe.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  144.     C.  471. 
I  still    liave  two  or  three  old  friends  will  grope  Their  way 
along   the   mere   half-mile   of   road.      R.    and   B.    3:242, 
C.  510. 
Last,  in  a  desperation  I  appealed  To  friends.    R.  and  B.  3  :  266. 

C.  520. 
Oh,  still  as  ever,  friends  are  they  Who,  in  the  interest  of  out- 
raged truth  Deprecate  such  rough  handling  of  a  lie  !     R. 
and  B.  3  :  399.     C.  571. 
There  must  be  many  a  pair  of  friends  Who,  arm  in  arm,  de- 
serve  the  warm  Moon-births  and    the    long  evening-ends. 
Maij  and  D.  4  :  215.     C.  395. 
Britisli  fashion,  shake  hands  hard  again,  Go  home  together, 

friends  the  more  confirmed.     Red  Cott.  5  :  10.     C.  740. 
Friends  .  .  .  who  discard  reserve,  Use  plain  words,  put  each 
dot  upon  each  i.     Inn  A.  5:  246.     C.  775. 
Friendship.     What  a  thing  friendship  is,  world  without  end  ! 
Flight  2  :  308.     C.  278. 
What  if  you  give  up  boy-and-girl-fools'-play  And  go  on  to 

wise  friendship  all  at  once  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  427.     C.  582. 
friendship,  as  they  name  satiety.     R.  and  B.  3  :  427.     C.  582. 
Fright.     Do  you  fright  your  hare  that  you  may  catch  your  hare  ? 

R.  and  B.  3  :  126.     C.  464. 
Frocked.     Got  his   arm   frocked  which,  bare,  the  law  would 

bruise.     R.  and  B.  3  :  366.     C.  557. 
Frontage.     Tlie  whole  of  the  frontage  shaven  sheer,  The  inside 

gaped.     House  5  :  337.     C.  809. 
Frontier.     Some  menace  to  a  mud-built  straw-thatched  farm 

O'  the  frontier.     R.  and  B.  3  :  391.     C.  5()7. 
Frost,     whether  frost  in  goblin-time  Startled  the  moon  with  his 

abrupt  bright  laugh.     R.  and  B.  3  :  31.     C.  426. 
Fruit.     To  each  who  lives  must  be  a  certain  fruit  Of  having 

lived  in  his  degree.     Sor.  1  :  308.     C.  120. 
Fruitage.     Here  on  earth  they  bore  their  fruitage,  mirth  and 

folly  were  the  crop.     Toccata  2  :  36.     C.  175. 
Fulcrum.     Would  we  move  the  world,  not  earth  but  heaven 
must  be  our  fulcrum  — jwu  sto!    Pietro  6  :  177.     C.  904. 


88  FULCRUM-STONE  — GAMALIEL'S 

Fulcrum-stone.      So  a  cliilrl  seesaws  on  or  kicks  away  The 
fiilcriiiu-stone   tliat  's   all   the   sage   requires.     R.   and   B. 
3  :  453.     C.  592. 
Full.     You  can  but  crown  the  brim  O'  the  cup  ;  if  it  be  full, 

what  matters  less  or  more  ?     Fifine  4  :  403.     C.  713. 
Furniture,     there  's  the  furniture  to  buy,  And  what  adornment 

like  a  worthy  wife  ?     Red  Cott.  5  :  22.     C.  744. 
Fury.     Nor  fury  nor  desi)air  he  satiates,  —  no,  Not  even  if  he 

attain  the  impossible.     R.  and  B.  3  :292.     C.  530. 
Future.     Well,  the  future  Must  recompense  the  past.     Straf. 
1  :  179.     C.  (59. 
one  may  anticipate,  Kehearse  the  future.    Sor.  1  :  212.    C.  82. 
The  Future  I   may  face  now  I  have  proved  the  Past.     Ben 

Ezra  4  :  188.     C.  384. 
The  Future  .  .  .  mists  turn  rainbows   there.      Jocli.  6  :  225. 

C.  924. 
Do  I  hold  the  Past  Thus  firm  and  fast  Yet  doubt  if  the  Future 

hold  I  can  ?     Never  6  :  235.     C.  928. 
Through  the  ambiguous  Present  to  the  goal  Of  some  all-recon- 
ciling Future  ?     Ger.  de  L.  G  :  351.     C.  973. 
What  must  his  future  life  be  ?  was  he  brought  So  low,  who 
stood  so  lofty  this  Spring  morn  ?     Sor.  1  :  221.     C.  86. 


G 

Gaetano.     Gaetano,  the  wife's  two-weeks'  babe,  The  husband's 

first-born  child,  his  son  and  heir.     R.  and  B.  3  :  10.     C.  418. 
"Gaetano"  —  no  old  name  For  sorrow's  sake;  I  .  .  .  took  a 

new  saint.     R.  and  B.  3  :  239.     C.  509. 
Gaetano  —  last  saint  of  our  hierarchy.  And  newest  namer  for 

a  thing  so  new  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  350.     C.  552. 
Gain.     Intent  on  gain  to  come  too  much  to  stay  And  scrutinize 

the  little  gained.     Para.  1  :  47.     C.  20. 
And  the  gain  of  earth  must  be  heaven's  gain  too.    By  Fire. 

2  :  67.     C.  187. 
Give  earth  yourself,  go  up  for  gain  above  !      J.  Lee  4 :  161. 

C.  375. 
Gained.     What 's  got  is  gained,  what 's  gained  soon  is  gained 

twice.     R.  and  B.  3  :  421.     C.  579. 
Gallantry.     The  sparks  of  gallantry  which  always  lurk  Some- 
how in  literary  breasts.     Two  Poets  6  :  100.     C.  868. 
Galley,     galley  Needing  neither  sails  nor  oars  nor  help  of  wind 

or   tide,  —  Needing  but  the  fume  of  fire.      Pietro  6  :  169. 

C.  899. 
Galuppi.     Oh   Galuppi,  Baldassare,  this  is  very  sad  to  find  1 

iMcata  2  :  34.     C.  175. 
Gamaliel's.     How  one  brought  up  at  the  very  feet  of  law  As 


GAME  — GENTLEMAN  80 

I,  awaits  the  grave  Gamaliel's  nod.      R.   and  B.   3 :  167. 
C.  481. 
Game.     Perhaps  the  game  Of  peaceful  men  is  warlike.    Forgiv. 

5  : 365.     C.  819. 

Gamesters,  your  liigh-flown  gamesters  hardly  take  Umbrage 
at   a   factor's   elbow   if   the  factor  pays  his  stake.     Clive 

6  :  158.     C.  894. 

Garden.  Here 's  the  garden  she  walked  across.  Floiver's 
2:8.     C.  1G6. 

Garden-ground,  the  stretch  forlorn  Of  garden-ground  be- 
neath my  window.     Chas.  A.  6  :  354.     C.  974. 

Garden-sights.  Under  his  vine  and  figtree  'mid  the  wealth 
Of  garden-sights  and  sounds.     Joch.  6  :  218.     C.  921. 

Garnet.    No  polishing  garnet  to  ruby  !    Pacch.  5  :  328.    C.  806. 

Gate,  the  iron  gate  Grovmd  its  teeth  to  let  me  pass  !  Sere- 
nade 2  :  75.     C.  190. 

Gathering.  A  stealthy  gathering  of  great-hearted  men. 
Straf.  1  :  131.     C.  50. 

Gauds,  sparkling  gauds  that  men  unearth  For  toy-cult  mainly 
of  you  womankind.     Bea.  Sig.  6  :  418  ;  7  :  69.     C.  999. 

Gauntlet-gatherer.  No  general  gauntlet-gatherer  for  the 
weak  Against  the  strong.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  339.     C.  290. 

Gaw^ain.  'T  was  not  for  every  Gawain  ^o  gaze  upon  the  Grail! 
Fifine  4  :  384.     C.  702. 

Gay.     Careless,  gay  even.     What 's  the  worth  of  life  ?     R.  and 

B.  3 : 455.     C.  593. 

Gaze.  Heaven's  gifts  are  not  wasted,  and  that  gaze  Kept,  and 
shall   keep   me   to   the   end,   her   own !      Colomhe   2  :  193. 

C.  236. 

Geier-eagle.     Ask  the  geier-eagle  why  she  stoops  at  once  Into 

the  vast  and  unexplored  abyss.     Para.  1  :  35.     C.  15. 
Gem.     All  the  wonder  and  wealth  of  the  mine  in  the  heart  of 

one  gem.     Sum.  Bon.  6  :  393  ;  7  :  11.     C.  988. 
Genius.     The  troubled  life  Of  genius,  seen  so  gay  .  .  .  grows 
sad  when  all  proves  vain.     Pau.  1  :  13.     C.  7. 
The  troubled  life   Of  genius,  seen  so  bright  when   working 
forth  Some  trusted  end,  seems  sad  when  all  in  vain.     Pau. 
1  :  13.* 
Genius  has  somewhat  of  the  infantine  :  But  of  the  childish, 

not  a  touch  nor  taint.     Prince  H.  4  :  372.     C.  698. 
O  genius  and  O  gold  —  Had  genius  ne'er  diverted  gold  from 

use  Worthy.     Ari.  A.  o:  177.     C.  659. 
The  master  of  the  mansion  was  no  fool  Assuredly,  no  genius 

just  as  sure  !     Chris.  Sm.  6  :  312.     C.  959. 
the  germ   Of  individual   genius  —  what  we   term  The  very 
self,  the  God-gift.     Bea.  Sig.  6  :  412  ;  7  :  58.     C.  996. 
Gentleman,     the  citv-ladies'  handsomest  Frankest  and  liberal- 
est  gentleman.     R.  and  B.  3  :  261.     C.  518. 


90  GENTLENESS  —  GIRL 

Gentleness.     The  great  mind  knows  the  power  of  gentleness, 
Only  tries  force  because  persuasion  fails.    Prince  H.  4  :  3GG. 
C.  G95. 
Gentleness  Goes  with  the  strength,  of  course.     Inn  A.  5  :271. 
C.  784. 
Germ,     here  's  the  worm  i'  the  core,  the  germ  O'  the  rotten- 
ness and  ruin  which  arrived.     li.  and  B.  3  :  37.     C.  429. 
Ghent.     Was  no  more  than  his  due  who  brought  good  news 

from  Ghent.     How  2  :  G.     C.  1G5. 
Ghost.     Enough  dotation  to  prevent  its  ghost  From  troubling 

earth  !     Cenciaja  5  :  374.     C.  823. 
Ghost-like.     — slid  Ghost-like  from  great  dark  room  to  great 

dark  room.     R.  and  B.  3  :  92.     C.  450. 
Ghosts.     I   want   just   now.  To  hear   the   sound   of  my  own 
tongue.     This  place  Is  full  of  ghosts.    Straf.  \:  \So.    C.  71. 
though    corpses    rot    obscurely,   Ghosts    escape.      St.  Mart. 

5  :  352.     C.  814. 
if  onlv   ghosts    might  blab!      Bad  D.   IV.   G:399;  7:25. 
C.  991. 
Giaconio.     Saliuguerra's  sole  son  Giacomo  Deceased,  fatuous 

and  doting,  ere  his  sire.     Sor.  1  :  322.     C.  12G. 
Giant.     I  seem,  dying,  as  one  going  in  the  dark  To   fight  a 
giant.     Pau.  1  :  25.     C.  11. 
I,  soon   to   rush    Alone   upon  a  giant   in  the  dark !     Straf. 

1  :  149.     C.  57. 
our  giant  proves  No  better  than  a  dwarf,  once  rivalry  Pros- 
trate round  him.     Prince  H.  4  :  371.     C.  G97. 
Giants.     Make  no  more  giants,  God,  But  elevate  the  race  at 

once  !     Para.  1  :  44.     C.  19. 
Gibe.     Through  gibe  and  jest,  those  stones  that  Shimei  flung  ! 

R.  and  B.  3:187.     C.  489. 
Gift.     I  cannot  so  disclaim  Heaven's  gift,  nor  call  it  other  than 
it  is  !     Colomhe  2  :  209.     C.  242. 
Gift  was  grace,  The  greatest  as  the  smallest.     Sun  6  :  250. 
C.  933. 
Gifts.     With  truth  and  purity  go  other  gifts.  All  gifts  come 
clustering  to  that.     Druses  2  :  142.     C.  215. 
the  I'ichness  hearted  in  such  joy  Is  in  the  knowing  what  are 
gifts  we  give.     Tico  Cam.  G  :  262.     C.  938. 
Giotto.     Giotto  !  .  .  .  Done  at  a  stroke  was  .  .  .  "  O  ! "     Thy 
great  Campanile  is  still  to  finish.     Old  Pict.  2  :  40.     C.  177. 
At  least  to  foresee   that  glory  of  Giotto   And  Florence  to- 
gether, the  first  am  I  !     Old  Pict.  2  :  44.     C.  178. 
Ay,  look  to  thy  laurels,  Giotto  !     Pacch.  5  :  319.     C.  803. 
Girl.     Like  a  girl  one  has  silently  loved  long  In  her  first  loneli- 
ness in  some  retreat.     Pau.  1:5.     C.  4. 
Like  a  girl  one  lias  loved  long  silently  lu  her  first  loveliness 
in  some  retreat.     Pau.  1  : 5.* 


GIRL  — GLOSSES  91 

Girl,     the  slight  graceful  girl  Tall  for  a  flowering  lily.      Straf. 

1:176.     C.  67. 
Girls.     Girls  who  look  arch  or  redden  when  boys  laugh.     7t. 

and  B.  3  :  238.     C.  .->09. 
Girolamo.     the  third   brother,   younger,   greedier  still,   Giro- 

lanio,  also  a  fledgeling  priest.     R.  and  B.  3  r-lO.     C.  430. 
Giver.     What  is  left  for  us,  save,  in  growth  Of  soul,  to  rise  up, 

far  past  both.  From  the  gift  looking  to  the  giver.     Chris.- 

Eve  4  :  23.     C.  324. 
Giving.     Giving    is    giving,    gift   claims   gift's   return.      Sun 

6  :  250.     C.  933. 
Glad.      A  heart  —  how  shall  I   say?  —  too  soon  made  glad, 

Too  easily  impressed.     My  Last  D.  2  :  233.     C.  252. 
Feel  glad  to  stand  'neath  God's  close  naked  hand  !     Look  up 

to  it!     iwWa2:391.     C.  311. 
Glamour,      touch  the   page  and  up  the  glamour  goes.      Red 

Cott.  5:5.     C.  738. 
Glance,     one  glance  Was  worth  whole  histories  of  noisy  utter- 
ance.    Fijine  4  :  428.     C.  727. 
I  glance  not  where  all  gaze.     Sonnet  C.  11. 
Glare,     if  I  could  not  say  it,  I  glared  it  at  him  ;  if  I  could  not 

glare  it,  I  prayed  against  him.     Soid's  Tr.  2  :  339.     C.  290. 
Glass-makers.     Commend  me  to  Gvpsy  glass-makers  and  pot- 
ters !     Flight  2  :  297.     C.  274. 
Glory.     Lust  of  glory  pricked  their  hearts  up,  dread  of  shame 

Struck  them  tame.     Love  2  :  26.     C.  172. 
But  she  —  The  glory  of  life,  the   beauty  of  the  world,   The 

splendor  of  heaven.     R.  and  B.  3  :  191.     C.  490. 
The  glory  of  his  nature,  I  had  thought.  Shot  itself  out  in  white 

light.     R.  and  B.  3  :  257.     C.  517. 
God  and  the  glory  !  never  care  for  gain.    The  present  by  the 

future,  what  is  that  ?     Andrea -i: :  So.     C.  347. 
glory  best  is  gained  By  daring  means  to  end,  ashamed  of 

shame.     Ari.  A.b:  162.     C.  653. 
glory    (always    symbolled    by    a    chain  !)      Forgiv.    5 :  303. 

C.  818. 
The  glory  swims  Girdling  the  glory-giver,  swallowed  straight 

By  night's  abysmal  gloom.     Bean-St.  6  :273.     C.  942. 
uncinct  by  dower  Of  dyes  which,  when  life's  da\-  began,  Round 

each  in"^  glory  ran.     Prol.  J .  6  :  389  ;  7  :  1.     C.  987. 
Glory's,     on  the  architrave  Of  Glory's  temple  golden-lettered 

for  Machaon  redivivus  !     Doctor  6  :  184.     C.  907. 
Glories.     Cold  glories  served  up  with  stale  fame  for  sauce.    R. 

and  B.  3  :  48.     C.  433. 
Glorified.     Tears,  sweat,  blood,  —  each  spasm,  ghastly  once, 

glorified  now.     Lxion  6 :  207.     C.  916. 
Glosses,    curious  glosses,  subtle  notices,  Ingenious  cleariugs-up. 

Straf.  1 :1S4.     C.  71. 


92  GLOVE  — GOD 

Glove.     As  well  buv  glove  and  then  thrust  naked  hand  I'  the 

thorn-bush.     R.  "and  B.  3  :  181.     C.  486. 
Ay,  we  needs  must  don  glove  would  we  pluck  the  rose  —  doff 

Silken  garment  would  we  climb  the  tree  and  take  its  fruit. 

Pletro  6  :  175.     C.  903. 
Gloves,     those  straving  Sad  gloves  she  was  always  mislaying. 

Glove  2  :  251.     C.  258. 
Gnats.     A  thousand  gnats  make  up  a  serpent's  sting.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  423.     C.  580. 

Go.     Go  !    Through  you,  as  through  a  breast  of  glass,  I  see. 
King  V.  1  :  381.     C.  150. 
't  is  best  I  go,  Go  carry  safe  my  memories  of  you  all  To  other 
scenes  of  action,  newer  lands.     Luria  2  :  373.     C.  303. 
Goat,     a  foreigner  had   trained  a  goat,  A  shuddering  white 

woman  of  a  beast.     R.  and  B.  3  :  250.     C.  514. 
God.     A  need,  a  trust,  a  yearning  after  God.   Pau.  1:8.     C.  5. 
And  what  is  tliat  I  hanger  for  but  God  ?     Pau.  1  :  20.     C.  9. 
the  sovereign  proof  That  we  devote  ourselves  to  God,  is  seen 
In  living  just  as  though  no  God  there  were.     Para.  1  :  31. 

C.  14. 

God  !     Thou  art  mind  !     Unto  the  master-mind  Mind  should 

be  precious.     Spare  my  mind  alone  !     Para.  1  :51.     C.  21. 
God  is  the  perfect  poet.  Who  in  his  person  acts  his  own  crea- 
tions.    Para.  1 :  GO.     C.  25. 
God  !      Thou  art  love !     I  build  my  faith  on  that.      Para. 

1 :  103.     C.  41. 
God  's  in  his  heaven  —  All 's  right  with  the  world  !      Pippa 

1 :  338.     C.  133. 
Suddenly  God  took  me.     Pippa  1  :  364.     C.  144. 
God,  whose  puppets,  best  and  worst,  Are  we  ;  there  is  no  last 

nor  first.     Pippa  1  :  367.     C.  145. 
God  is  seen  God  In  the  star,  in  the  stone,  in  the  flesh,  in  the 

soul  and  the  clod.     Saul  2  :  56.     C.  183. 
I  believe  it  !     'T  is  thou,  God,  that  givest,  't  is  I  who  receive. 

Saul  2  :  57.     C.  184. 
Well,  this  cold  clav  clod  Was  man's  heart :  Crumble  it,  and 

what  comes  next  ?    Is  it  God  ?     In  a  Year  2  :  84.     C.  193. 
God  must  judge  the  couple  :  leave  them  as  they  are.     Before 

2  :  86.     C.  193. 
'T  is   God    shall    repay  :     I    am    safer   so.      Patriot   2  :  233. 

C.  252. 
They    sought    God    side    by   side.     Boy   and   Ang.   2:241. 

C.  254. 
And  yet  God  has  not  said  a  word  !     Porph.  2  :  330.     C.  286. 
Ay,  God  remains.   Even  did  men   forsake  you.     Soul's    Tr. 

2  :  338.     C.  289. 
I  commence  mv  song,  my  due  To  God  who  best  taught  song 

by  gift  of  thee.     R.  and  B.  3  :  32.     C.  427. 


GOD  93 

God.  A  saints'  grace  or,  say,  grant  of  the  good  God, —  A  fiddle- 
loin's  end  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  38.     C.  429. 

She  went  first  to  the  best  adviser,  God.  R.  and  B.  3  :  80. 
C.  445. 

with  the  mid-day  blaze  of  truth  above,  Tlie  unlidded  eye  of 
God  awake,  aware.     R.  and  B.  3  :  98.     C.  453. 

God  breathes,  not  speaks,  his  verdicts,  felt  not  heard.    R.  and 

B.  3  :  182.     C.  487. 

0  great,  just,  good  God  !     Miserable  me  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  236. 

C.  508. 

To  God  the  strong,  God  the  beneficent,  God  ever  mindful  in 
all  strife  and  strait.     R.  and  B.  3  :  2G8.     C.  521. 

Let  us  leave  God  alone  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  276.     C.  524. 

what  I  call  God,  And  fools  call  Nature.  R.  and  B.  3  :  380. 
C.  563. 

Within  whose  circle  of  experience  burns  The  central  truth. 
Power,  Wisdom,  Goodness,  —  God.  R.  and  B.  3  :  392. 
C.  568. 

Correct  the  portrait  by  the  living  face,  Man's  God,  bv  God's 
God  in  the  mind  of  man  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  397.     C.  570. 

There 's  God,  go  tell  Him,  testify  your  worst !  R.  and  B. 
3:449.     C.  591. 

God  takes  his  own  part  in  each  thing  he  made  ;  Made  for  a 
reason,  he  conserves  his  work.     it.  and  B.  3  :  454.     C.  593. 

In  face  of  one  proof  more  that  '  God  is  true  And  every  man 
a  liar.'     R.  and  B.  3  :  471.     C.  599. 

In  youth  I  looked  to  these  very  skies.  And  probing  their  im- 
mensities, I  found  God  there.     Chris.-Eve  4:7.     C.  318. 

God  's  all,  man's  naught.     Chris.-Eve  4  :7.     C.  318. 

God,  whose  pleasure  brought  Man  into  being,  stands  away  As 
it  were  a  handbreadth  off,  to  give  Room  for  the  newly- 
made  to  live.     Chris.-Eve  4:7.     C.  318. 

1  shall  behold  thee,  face  to  face,  O  God,  and  in  thy  light  re- 
trace How  in  all  I  loved  here,  still  wast  thou  !  Chris.-Eve 
4:9.     C.  319. 

For  I  intend  to  get  to  God,  For  't  is  to  God  I  speed  so  fast. 

Joh.  Agri.  4  :  71.     C.  341. 
God   smiles   as   he   has   always   smiled.      Joh.    Agri.   4 :  71. 

C.  341. 

Ere  suns  and  moons  could  wax  and  wane,  Ere  stars  were  thun- 

dergirt,  or  piled  The  heavens,  God  thought  on  me  his  child. 

Joh.  Agri.  4::  71.     C.  341. 
But  here  is  the  finger  of  God,  a  flash  of  the  will  that  can. 

Abt  F.  4  :  184,     C.  383. 
But  I  need,  now  as  then.  Thee,  God,  who  mouldest  men.    Ben 

Ezra  4  :  190.     C.  385. 
Is  not  God  now  i'  the  world  His  power  first  made  ?     Death  m 

D.  4 :  196.     C.  387. 


94  GOD  — GOD'S 

God.      I  recognize   Power  passing   mine,  immeasurable,  God. 

Prince  H.  4  :  334.     C.  083. 
Gotl  takes  the   business  into  His  own  hands  At  such  time. 

Prince  H.  4  :  347.     C.  G88. 
in  the  hand  of  God  who  comes  Before  and  after,  witli  a  work 

to  do  Which  no  man  helps  nor  hinders.     Prince  U.  4  :  365. 

C.  695. 
how,  by  gifts  To  God  and  to  God's  poor,  a  man  might  stay  In 

sin  and  yet  stave  off  sin's  punishment.      Red  Cott.  5  :  72. 

C.  763. 
Glory    to    God  —  who    saves    Euripides!     Ari.    A.    5:241. 

C.  681. 
Earth's  most  exquisite  disclosure,  heaven's  own  God  in  evi- 
dence !     La  S.  6  :  54.     C.  849. 
Call  this  —  God,   then,  call  that  —  soul,  and  both  —  the  only 

facts  for  me.     La  S.  6  :  62.     C.  853. 
God  Who  scanned  —  for  He  does  —  each  feature  Of  the  face 

thrown  up  in  appeal  to  Him.     Don.  6  :  198.    C.  913. 
God  is  soul,  souls  I  and  thou  :  with  souls  should  souls  have 

place.     Epil.  Eagle  6  :  241.     C.  930, 
'  All-wise,    all-good,    all-mighty  —  God    is     such  ! '     Family 

6  :  246.     C.  932. 
'Before  man's  First,  and  after  man's  poor  Last,  God  operated 

and  will  operate.'     Camel-D.  6  :  259.     C.  937. 
God  is  all-good,  all-wise,  all-powerful  :  truth  ?    Take  it  and 

rest  there.     Benn-St.  6  :  278.     C.  944. 
Bounteous   God,  Deviser   and   dispenser  of   all  gifts  To  soul 

through  sense.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  333.     C.  966. 
Omniscient  omnipotent  God,  Thee  I  thank,  Thee  ever.  Thee 

only  !     Fust  6  :  377.     C.  983. 
God-like.     Creative  and  self-sacrificing  too,  And  thus  eventu- 
ally God-like.     R.  and  B.  3  :  387.     C.  566. 
God's.     God's  service  is  established  here  As  he  determines  fit, 

and  not  your   way,  And   this   you   cannot    brook.      Para. 

1  :  99.     C.  39. 
Oh,  to   hear   God's  voice   plain  as  I  heard   it  first.     Pippa 

1  : 350.     C.  138. 
God's  gold  just  shining  its  last  where  that  lodges,  Palled  be- 
neath man's  usurjiature.    Mauler  H.  2  :  95.     C.  197. 
Part  God's  way,  part  the  other  way  than  God's.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  13.     C.  419.> 
mark  God's  verdict  in  determinable  words.     R.  and  B.  3  :  182. 

C.  487. 
God's  glimmer,  that  came  through  the  ruin-top,  Was  witness 

why  all   lights  were  quenched  inside.     R.  and  B.  3  :  256. 

C.  516. 
I  never  realized   God's  birth  before  —  How  He  grew  likest 

God  in  being  born.     R.  arid  B.  3  :  275.     C.  524. 


GOD'S  — GOOD  95 

God's.     God's  work,  be  sure,  No  more  spreads  wasted,  than 

falls  scant  !     Eas.-Da;/  4  :  51.     C.  333. 
in  God's  breast,  uiy  own  abode,  ...  I  lay  my  spirit  down  at 

last.     Joh.  Agri.  4  :  71.     C.  341. 
God's  man  and  woman  merely.     Dan.  Bar.  6  :  304.     C.  956. 
Godhead.     'T  is  the  weakness  in  strength,  that  I  cry  for  !  my 

rtesh,  that  I  seek  In  the  Godhead  !     I  seek  and  I  find  it. 

Saul  2  :  57.     C.  184. 
Goethe's.      Goethe's  Estate  in  Weimar,  —  just  a  plan!     Ber. 

de  M.  6  :  299.     C.  953. 
Gold.     Nay  but  you,  who  do  not  love  her.  Is  she  not  pure  gold, 

my  mistress  ?     Song  2  :  21.     C.  170. 
And  that  glory  and  that  shame  alike,  the  gold  Bought  and 

sold.     Love  2  :  26.     C.  172. 
A  fair  face,  ...  a  pocket-full  of  gold  ^Yhen  he  can  worry 

both  her  parents  dead.     R.  and  B.  3  :  198.     C.  493. 
Make  Body  and  soul  wring  gold  out,  lured  within  The  clutch 

of  hate  by  love.     R.  and  B.  3  :  308.     C.  558. 
Nor  lover  nor  friend  —  be  gold  for  both  !     Gold  Hair  4  :  168. 

C.  378. 
Her  back-hair  was  a  block  of  solid  gold.      Red  Cott.  5  :  21. 

C.  744. 
that  long-craved  mere  visionary  gold.    Two  Poets  5  :  87.    C.  863. 
who  picks  up,  then  pitches  Gold  away  —  philosophizes  :  none 

disputes  his  claim.     Pietro  6  :  173.     C.  902. 
lavish  gold  !     How  comfortably  quick  shall  life  depart  Cos- 
seted by  attentions  manifold  !     Doctor  6  :  184.     C.  907. 
Gold  's  gold  though  dim  in  the  dust :  court-polish  soon  turns 

it  yellow.     Sol.  and  B.  6  :  200.     C.  914. 
gold  and  jewels  no  few  :  Whom  these  help  to  court  with,  but 

seldom    shall   miss   The   love   of   a   leman.      Fmt   6 :  368. 

C.  980. 
punctual  at  prayer-time  :  gold  lurked  beneath  Alloy  of  the 

rankest  brass.     Ponte  J.  6  :  407  :  7  :  47.     C.  994. 
Goldoni.     Goldoni  —  good,  gay,  sunniest  of  souls,  —  Glassing 

half  Venice  in  that  verse  of  thine.     C.  910. 
Gone,     one  scarce  can  say  that  he  feared,  Tliat  he  even  gave 

it  a  thought,  the  gone  thing  was   to  go.      Aht  V.  4:184. 

C.  383. 
Good.     I  never  fashioned  out  a  fancied  good  Distinct  from 

man's.     Para.  1  :  119.     C.  47. 
W  hen  a  soul  has  seen  By  the  means  of  Evil  that  Good  is  best, 

.  .  .  The  uses  of  labor  are  surely  done.     Old  Pict.  2:41. 

C.  177. 
discovering  much  good  on  the  worst  side,  remember  that  the 

same  process  should  proportionably  magnify  and  demon- 
strate to  you  the  much   more  good   on   the  better   side  ! 

SouVs  Tr.  2  :  355.     C.  297. 


96  GOOD  — GOSSIPRY 

Good.     That 's  all  we  may  expect  of  man,  this  side  The  grave  : 

his   good   is  —  knowing   he   is   bad.       R.    and   B.    3 :  192. 

C.  4«J0. 
no  touch  Of  harm  came,  but  all  good,  all  happiness,  Not  one 

faint  fleck  of  failure  !     li.  and  B.  3  :  277.     C.  525. 
the  obduracy  to  good,  Lies  not  with  the  impracticable  stuff 

Whence  man  is  made.     R.  and  B.  3  :  390.     C.  567. 
call  good  good  And  evil  evil,  (even  though  razed  and  blank 

Tlie  old  titles.)     R.  and  B.  3  :  397.     C.  570. 
There  shall  never  be  one  lost  good  !     WliaL  was,  shall  live  as 

before.     Aht  V.  4  :  184.     C.  383. 
All  we  have  willed  or  hoj)ed  or  dreamed  of  good,  shall  exist ; 

Not  its  semblance,  but  itself.     Alt  F.  4  :  184.     C.  383. 
But  no  good   supplants  a  good,  Nor  beauty  undoes  beauty. 

Balau.  4  :  322.     C.  G25. 
Constant   in    faith   that   only  good   works  good,  While  evil 

yields  no  fruit  but  impotence  !     ^1?-/.  ^.  5  :  1G2,     C.  653. 
Good,  see,  wants  evil.     Pisgah  I.  5  :  341.     C.  810. 
Good,  done   here,  be  there  rewarded,  —  evil,   worked  here, 

there  amerced  !     La  S.  6  :  70.     C.  856. 
men  must  do  The  little  good  man  may.    Ivan  6  :  133.    C.  882. 
strives  for  good  Through  evil,  —  earth  its  race-ground,  heaven 

its  goal.     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  296.     C.  952. 
Earth's   good   is  with   evil   blent :  Good   struggles  but  evil 

reigns.     Rev.  6  :  436  ;  7  :  105.     C.  1005. 
Yet  God  is  good  :  I  started  sure  of  that.  And  why  dispute  it 

now?     P«m.  1:52.     C.  22. 
The  one  good  thing  left  in  evil  days.     Flight  2  :  291.     C.  272. 
Be  happy  !      Add    but   the   other   grace,   Be   good !       Worst 

4  :  173.     C.  379. 
It 's  wiser  being  good  than  bad  ;  It 's  safer  being  meek  than 

fierce.     App.  Fall.  4  :  258.     C.  413. 
Good  as  beautiful  is  she,  With  gifts  that  match  her  goodness. 

Da7i.  Bar.  6  :  303.     C.  955. 
—  "  Good  son,  good  brother,  friend  in  whom  we  scan  No  fault 

nor  flaw."     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  328.     C.  965. 
Good-humor.      Wanting   beauty,   we   cultivate   good-humor ; 

missing  wit,  we  get  riches.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  357.     C.  297. 
Goodly.     With  goodly  shoulderblade  and  proper  leg,  A  portly 

make  and  a  symmetric  shape.     R.  and  B.  3  :  50.     C.  434. 
Goodness,     that  childish  goodness,  absurd  faith.  Stupid  self- 
satisfaction,  you  so  praise.     R.  and  B.  3  :  125.     C.  464. 
Gospel.     Gospel  takes  up  the  rod  which  Law  lets  fall  ;  Mercy 

is  vigilant  when  justice  sleeps  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  412.    C.  576. 
Gossip.     Gossip  in  a  public  place,  a  sample-speech.      R.  and 

B.  3  :  20.     C.  422. 

Gossipry.     court   Of   common   gossipry.      R.   and  B.  3- :  183. 

C.  487. 


GOSSIPRY  — GRATITUDE  97 

Gossipry.     Subsequent  talk,  chatter  and  gossipry,  Babble  to 

sjuipatliizing  he  and  she.     R.  and  B.  3  :  352.     C.  552. 

Do  you  live  in  this  world's  blow  of  blacks,  Palaver,  gossipry, 

a  single  hour  Nor  find  one  smut  has  settled  on  your  nose. 

Sludge  4  :  233.     C.  402. 

Got.     That  he  asked  and  that  he  got, — nothing  more.     Herve 

5  :  358.     C.  816. 
Gout,     hands  like  feet  Because  of  gout  in  every  finger-joint. 

R.  and  B.  3 -Am.     C.  577. 

Government.     And  now,  pray,  what  does  please  you  ?     To  live 

without  any  government  at  all  ?    SouPs  Tr.  2  :  349.     C.  294. 

Grace,     but  what 's  grace  When  you  want  meat  and  drink  and 

clothes  and  fire  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  450.     C.  591 . 

grace  that  somehow  slips  Still  from  one's  soulless  finger-tips. 

/.  Lee  4  :  162.     C.  375. 
One  grace  that  grew  to  its  full  on  earth.     Gold  Hair  4  :  165. 

C.  377. 
Mimic  grace.  Not  make  deformity  your  mask  !    Fifine  4  :  415. 

C.  720. 
found  best  flowers  Hid  deepest  in  the  dark,  —  named  unplucked 
grace  Of  soul.     Two  Poets  6  :  79.     C.  859. 
Grandeur.     How  natural  seems  grandeur  in  relief.  Cliff-base 
with  frothy  spites  against  its  calm  !    ^n.  ^.5:110.    C.  632. 
Grandnesses.     He  did  too  many  grandnesses,  to  note  Much  in 
the  meaner  things  about  his  jjath.     Balau.  4  :  293.     C.  614. 
Granite.     The  fact  that  .  .  .  Had  somehow  plain  and  pillar- 
like prevailed  .  .  .  Granite,  .   .  .  proved  sandstone,  fi'iable. 
R.  and  B.  3  :  16.     C.  420. 
Granite,  time  's  tooth  should  grate  against,  not  graze.     R.  and 
B.  3  :  16.     C.  420. 
Grasp.     Ah,  but  a   man's  reach   shoxild  exceed  his  grasp.  Or 

what 's  a  heaven  for  ?     Andrea  4  :  85.     C.  346. 
Grass.     And  such  plenty  and  perfection,  see,  of  grass  Never 
was  !     Love   2  :  26.     C.  172. 
the   grass,  it  grew  as   scant  as  hair  In   leprosy.     Childe  R. 

2  :  332.     C.  287. 
to  call  it  grass  were  to  mock  :  Dead  to  the  roots,  so  deep  was 
done  The  work  of  the  summer  sun.    /.  Lee  4  :  157.    C.  374. 
Grass  like   green  velvet,  gravel-walks   like    gold.  Bosses   of 
shrubs,  embosomings  of  flowers.     Red  Cott.  5  :  16.     C.  742. 
Grateful,     how   grateful   will   yourself   be    When,    his   secret 
gained,   you   match   your  —  master   just   before  ?      Pietro 
6:171.     C.  901. 
Gratitude.     And  she  all  silverly  baaed  gratitude  While  medita- 
ting mischief  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  97.     C.  452. 
All  under  the  pretence  of  gratitude  !   R.  and  B.  3  :  331.    C.  544. 
waste  no  whit  Of  aught  so  rare  ou  earth  as  gratitude  !     R. 
and  B.  3  :  381.     C.  563. 


98  GRATITUDE  — GREEK  ART 

Gratitude,    gratitude  immense  For  this  tnie  draught  from  the 

Pierian  rill !     Two  Poets  6 :  95.     C.  866. 
Grave.     This  life  of  mine  Must  be  lived  out  and  a  grave  thor- 
oughly earned.     Para.  1  :94.     C.  37. 
Graves.     See,  as  the  prettiest  graves  will  do  in  time,  Our  poet's 
wants  the  freshness  of  its  prime.    Earth's  Im.  2  :20.    C.  170. 
Grayness.     A  common  grayness  silvers  everything,  All  in  a  twi- 
light.    Andrea  4: -.83.     C.  346. 
Great.     Gentlemen,  Stand  back !   a  great  thing  passes  here. 
Straf.  1  :167.     C.  64. 
A  great  theme  :  may  my  strength  be  adequate !     R.  and  B. 

3  :  324.     C.  542. 
to  grow  good  and  great,  Rather  than  simply  good.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  472.     C.  599. 
All  women  love  great  men  If  young  or  old ;  it  is  in  all  the 

tales.     In  aB.4: 143.     C.  368. 
A  solitary  great  man 's  worth  the  world.     Prince  H.  4  :  347. 

C.  688. 
Be  all  that 's  great  and  good  and  wise,  August,  sublime  — 
swell    out   your   frog   the   right   ox  -  size.      Fifine   4 :  416. 
C.  720. 
The  great  deed  ne'er  grows  small.     Ecliet.  6  :  154.     C.  893. 
Greatness.     I  've  heard,  great   characters   require   a  fall   Of 
fortune  to  show  greatness  by  uprise  :  Irin  A.  o  :  252.    C.  777. 
Greece,     the  sprinkled  isles,  Lily  on  lily,  that  o'erlace  the  sea, 
And  laugh  their  pride  when  the  light  wave  lisps  "  Greece." 
Cleon  4  :  115.     C.  358. 
Greece  .  .  .  soimds  and  sights  there  help  the  body's  hearing, 
seeing.  Till  the  soul  grows  godlike.    Pietro  6  :  169.     C.  900. 
Greed,     how  craft  and  greed.  Quickened  by  penury  and  pre- 
tentious hate  Of  plain  truth,  brutify  and  bestialize.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  79.     C.  445. 

the  daily  hap  Of  purblind  greed  that  dog-like  still  drops  bone. 

Grasps  shadow,  and  then  howls.    R.  and  B.  3  :  155.    C.  476. 

greed  unseemly,  prompting  grasp  undue.     R.  and  B.  3  :  365. 

C.  557. 

So,  to  the  last,  greed  found  itself  at  odds  With  craft  in  thee, 

and,  proving  conqueror —     R.  and  B.  3  :375.     C.  561. 
Whose  swine-like  snuffling  greed  and  grunting  lust  1  had  to 

wink  at  or  help  gratify.     R.  and  B.  3  :  437.     C.  586. 
Greed  and  strife.  Hatred  and  cark  and  care,  what  place  have 

they  In  yon    blue  liberality  of   heaven?     Ari.  A.  5:100. 

C.  629. 
how  may  greed  Vainglorious  operate  in  worldly  souls  !     Cen- 

ciaja  5  :  375.     C.  823. 
Greek.     Learn  Greek  by  all  means,  read  the  '  Blind  Old  Man, 

Sweetest  of  Singers.'     Dev.  6  :  429  ;  7  :  90.     C.  1003. 
Greek  Art.     When  Greek  Art  ran  and  reached  the  goal,  .  .  . 


4 


GREET  — GUEST  99 

The  Truth  of  Man,  as  by  God  first  spoken,  Which  tlie 
actual  generations  garble.  Was  re-uttered.  Old  Pict.  2  :  39. 
C.  176. 

Greet.     Wherefore  a-glootn  ?     Greet  us,  thy  gossipry,  cousin 
and  sib  !     Fust  6  :  306.     C.  979. 

Gressoney.     A  fancy-freak  by  contrast  born  of  thee,  Delight- 
ful Gressoney  !     Prol.  Fer.  6  :  240.     C.  929. 

Greve.     the  huge  battlemented  convent-block  Over  the  little 
forky  flashing  Greve.     R.  and  B.  3  :  404.     C.  572. 

Grief,     instead  of  joy,  use  grief  Before  its  novelty  have  time 
subside  !     Sor.  1  :  314.     C.  123. 
Nay,  blame  grief  that  's   fickle,   Time  that  proves  a  traitor. 
Chance,  change.     St.  Mart.  5  :  352.     C.  814. 

Griefful.     great,  grave,  griefful  air.     it.  and  B.  3  :  204.    C.  496. 

Grime.     No  matter  whether  you  get  grime  or  glare  !    R.  and  B. 

3  :  246.     C.  512. 

Grime   is  grace  To  whoso  gropes  amid   the  dung  for  gold. 
R.  and  B.  3  :  332.     C.  545. 
Grin.     Found  the  world's  face  an  universal  grin  At  this  last 
best  of  the  Hundred  Merry  Tales.  R.  and  B.  3  :  100.  C.  453. 
underwent  the  archway's  grin.  Traversed  the  length  of  sar- 
casm in  the  street.     R.  and  B.  3  :  171.     C.  482. 
Grotesqueness.     Seldom  went  such  grotesqueness  with  such 

woe.     Childe  R.  2  :  332.     C.  287. 
Grovr.     Why  stay  we  on  the  earth   unless  to  grow  ?     Clean 
4 :  117.     C.  359. 
I   say   that  man  was  made  to  grow,  not  stop.     Death  in  D. 

4  :  200.     C.  389. 

GroTwing.     Never  leave  growing  till  the  life  to  come  !     Bishop 

B.  4  :  107.     C.  355. 
Gro'Wth.     Growth  came  when,  .  .  .  You  turned  your  eyes  in- 
wardly.    Old  Pict.  2  :  40.     C.  177. 
Born,  bred,  with  just  one  instinct,  —  that  of  growth.     Red 

Cott.  5  :  92.     C.  771. 
Gruel.     The  supper-summons,  gruel  grown  a  feast.     Red  Cott. 

5:6.     C.  738. 
Grumbling  Hive.     Ah,  Fabulist,  what  luck,  could  I  contrive 

To  coax  from  thee  another  "  Grumbling  Hive  "  !    Ber.  de  M. 

6  :  297.     C.  953. 
Guarded.     Guarded  from  the  arch-tempter  all  must  fight.  By 

a  great  birth,  traditionary  name.    R.  and  B.  3  :  305.    C.  557. 
Guess.     The  world's  guess,  as  it  crowds  the  bank  o'  the  pool, 

At  what  were  figure  and  substance,  by  their  splash.    R.  and 

B.  3  :  19.     C.  422. 
Guessed.     Who  'd  have  guessed  it  from  his  lip  Or  his  brow's 

accustomed  bearing.      Waring  2  :  270.     C.  264. 
Guest.     Who  shall  gainsay  that  the  raw  new-come  guest  Blames 

oft,  too  sensitive  ?    Ari.  A.  b  :  163.     C.  653. 


100  GUESTS— HAIR 

Guests.     Guests  by  hundreds,  not  one  caring  If  the  dear  host's 

neck  were  wried.     Gondola  2  :  2G4.     C.  262. 
Gufifaw^.     Gives   an   enormous   guffaw  for   reply.     R.  and  B. 

3 : 296.     C.  532. 
Guide,     by  tlie  guidance  of  antiquity,  (Our  one  infallible  guide) 

A',  and  B.  3  :  324.     C.  542. 
Guidi.     Ilis  name  is  Guidi  —  he  '11  not  mind  the  monks — They 

call  him  Hulking  Tom.     Fra  Lippo  4  :  80.     C.  344. 
Guido  Reni.     the    piece   Of   Master  Guido   Reui,    Christ   on 

cross.  Second  to  naught  observable  in  Rome.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  35.     C.  428. 
Guillichini.     And  so  With   Guillichini ;    he 's   condemned   of 

course  To  the  galleys.     R.  and  B.  3  :  234.     C.  508. 
Guilt.     Double-dyed   In   folly   and   in   guilt.     Forgiv.    5 :  366. 

C.  820. 
Guiltiness,     a   full   certificate   Of   his  immitigable  guiltiness. 

A.  onri^.  3:353.     C.  553. 
Guiltless.     I  stand  here  guiltless  in  thought,  word  and  deed. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  230.     C.  506. 
Guttler,     in  debaucherv's  guild  Admitted  prime   guttler  and 

guzzler.     Fust  6  :  369.     C.  980. 


H 

Habit,     no  liking  of  the  eye  Nor  longing  of  the  heart,  but  the 
poor  bond  Of  habit.     SouVs  Tr.  2  :342.     C.  291. 

"  Liitle  by  little  break  a  habit,  Don,  Become  necessity  to  fee- 
ble flesh  !  "  R.  and  B.  3  :  348.  C.  551. 
Habits.  I  am  spoiled  ;  my  life  still  tends  As  first  it  tended  ; 
I  am  broken  and  trained  To  my  old  habits.  Para.  1  :  76. 
C.  31. 
Hair.  Dear  dead  women,  with  such  hair,  too  —  what's  become 
of  all  the  gold  —     Toccata  2  :  36.     C.  175. 

It  was  a  little  plait  of  hair.     Fliglit  2  :  .306.     C.  277. 

Hair  in  heaps  lay  heavily  Over  a  pale  brow  spirit-pure.     Stat, 
and  B.  2  :  322.     C.  284. 

bright  devastated  hair.     R.  and  B.  3  :  27.     C.  425. 

With  hair  black  as  yon  patch  and  eyes  as  big  As  yon  poman- 
der to  make  freckles  fly.     R.  and  B.  3  :  116.     C.  460. 

hair  .  .  .  Plaits,  places  the  insulting  rope  on  head  To  be  an 
eyesore  past  dishevelment  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  434.     C.  584. 

Hair,  such  a  wonder  of  flix  and  floss.  Freshness  and  fragrance 
—  floods  of  it,  too  !     Gold  Hair  4  :  165.     C.  377. 

Hair  So  young  and  yellow,  crowning  sanctity.  And  claiming 
solitude  .  .  .  can  hair  be  false?     Red  Cott.  5:21.     C.  744. 

His  brown  hair  burst  a-spread,  his  eyes  were  suns  to  see.    Ned 
B.  6  :  147.     C.  890. 


HAIR  — HAPPY  101 

Hair.     That  unkempt  careless  hair  —  brown,  yellowish.      Imp. 

Aug.  6:427;  7:87.     C.  1002. 

Hair-plaits,     what  far  bliss  Lets  the  crisp  hair-plaits  fall  so 

low  they  kiss  Those  lucid  shoulders  ?     Ger.  de  L.  G  :  348. 

C.  972. 

Hair's-breadth.      within   hair's-breadth   of   escape,    Impunity 

and  the  thing  supposed  success.    R.  and  B.  3  :  374.    C.  560. 

Hairs.      —  hairs  silk-soft,  silver-white,  Such  as  the  wool-plaut's. 

Joch.  6  :  211.     C.  918. 
Half.     But  all  is  changed  the  moment  you  descry  Mankind  as 

half  yourself.       Sor.  1  :  290.     C.  113. 
Half-done,     penning  in  a  wild   dismay,  Caught  with  his  work 

half-done  on  Judgment  Bay.      Two  Poets  6  :  85.     C.  862. 
Half-escape,     according  as  we  shape  Most  of  hope  or  most  of 

fear,  we  issue  in  a  half-escape.     La  S.  6  :  62.     C.  853. 
Half-moon,    half-moon  large  and  low.    Aleeting  2  :  21 .    C.  170. 
Hand.    I  will  hold  your  hand  but  as  long  as  all  may,  Or  so  very 
little  longer  !     Lost  Mis.  2  :  20.     C.  170. 
Till  God's  hand  beckoned  unawares.     Evelyn  2  :  24.     C.  171. 
What  hand  and  brain  went  ever  paired  ?     Last  Ride  2  :  280. 

C.  268. 

I  only  want  my  hand  for  that  one  use.  To  take  her  hand,  and 

say  I  marry  you.     Red  Colt.  5  :  82.     C.  767. 

Happiness.     One  who,  in  youth,  found  wise  enough  to  choose 

The  happiness  his  riper  years  approve.    Para.  1  :  66.    C.  27. 

There  is  such  niggard  stock  of   happiness  To  share.      Sor. 

1 :  254.     C.  99. 
Oh,  my  happiness  Rounds  to  the  full  whether  I  choose  or  no  ! 

Druses  2  :  118.     C.  206. 
How  we  are  made  for  baj^piness  —  how  work  Grows  play,  ad- 
versity a  winning  fight !     In  a  B.  ^•.  144.     C.  369. 
in  the  face  of  happiness  So  absolute,  fear  chills  me.     Inn  A. 

5  :  269.     C.  784. 
Work  freely  done  should  balance  happiness  Fully  enjoyed. 
Forgiv.  5  :  359.     C.  817. 
Happy.     Know  my  last  state  is  happy,   free  from  doubt   Or 
touch  of  fear.     Love  me  and  wish  me  well.     Pau.  1  :  25. 
C.  11. 
we  shall  be  happy  yet :  This  cannot  last  forever.     King    V. 

1  :  369.     C.  145. 
Come  what,  come  will.  You  have  been  happy.     A  Blot  2  :  154. 

C.  220. 
Oh,  make  us  happy  and  you  make  us  good  !    it.  and  B.  3  :  112. 

C.  458. 
Oh  what  a  happy  friendly  eve  was  that  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  242. 

C.  511. 
Meanwhile,  the  best  way  to  escape  His  ire  Is,  not  to  seem  too 
happy.     Caliban  4  :  212.     C.  394. 


102  HAPPY  — HATE 

Happy.   We  have  not  sighed  deep,  laughed  free,  Starved,  feasted, 

despaired,  —  beeu  happy.     Youth  and  A.  4  :219.     C.  396. 
I   will   be   happy   if   but   for   once.     Dubiety   6 :  391  ;    7:6. 

C.  987. 
Happy-tempered.     A  happy-tempered  bringer  of  the  best  Out 

of  the  worst.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :339.     C.  290. 
Harangued.      gray-haired    meu  .  .  .  harangued   the   people  : 

then    Sea-like    that    people   surging  .  .  .  Shouted.      Sor. 

1  :  245.     C.  95. 
Harangued,  equipped,  instructed,  pressed  each  clod  With  his 

will's  imprint.     R.  and  B.  3  :  103.     C.  455. 
Harbor.     Some  sparkle,  though  from  topmost  beacon-tip.  That 

warrants  life  a  harbor  through  the  haze.     R.  and  B.  3  :  74. 

C.  443. 
Hard.     But  no,  —  the  man  's  allured  By  liking  for  the  new  and 

hard  in  his  exploit !     Fifine  4  :  418.     C.  722. 
O  but  is  it  not  hard.  Dear  ?     Mary  W.  6  :  206.     C.  916. 
Hard  on  you  men's  hearts  are  :  be  not  your  heart  hard  on  Me 

who  kiss  your  garment's  hem.     Pietro  6  :  169.     C.  900. 
Harder,    harder  to  do  wrong  than  right  The  first  time.   R.  and 

B.  3  :  365.     C.  557. 

Harm.     — It  is  so  hard  for  shrewdness  to  admit  Folly  means 
no   harm  when  she  calls  black  white  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  22. 

C.  423. 

Harnionics.      Grave    note  whence  —  list    aloft! — harmonics 

sound.     Fifine  ^-.4:39.     C.  733. 
Harmony.     Why   rushed   the  discords  in,  but   that  harmony 

should  be  prized  ?     Abt  V.4::  185.     C.  383. 
Harp,     as  when  maltreated  harp  Renders  in  tinkle  what  some 

player-prig  Means  for  a  grave  tune.       Ttvo  Poets  6 ;  103. 

C.  869. 
Harvest,    harvest  Dire  as  the  homicidal  dragon-crop  !    Ari.  A. 

5:233.     C.  678. 
Haste,     haste   And  anger  have  undone  us.      A  Blot  2  :  172. 

C.  227. 
why  this  haste  And  scramble  and  indecent  secrecy  ?     R.  and 

B.  3  :  41.     C.  430. 
Hatched.     Hatched   in   some  old-world   beast's  brain   bids  it 

speed  Where  the  sun  wants  brute-presence.      Two  Poets 

6  :  91.     C.  864. 
Hate.     But  I  begin  to  know  what  thing  hate  is —  .  ,  .  And  I 

myself  have  furnished  its  first  prey.     Pau.  1  :  16.     C.  8. 
If  that  be  our  true  object  which  evokes  Our  powers  in  full- 
est strength,  be  sure  'tis  hate  !     Para.  1  :89.     C.  36. 
Yet  men  have  doubted  if  the  best  and  bravest  Of  spirits  can 

nourish  him  with  hate  alone.     Para.  1  :  89.     C.  36. 
even  hate  is  but  a  mask  of  love's,  to  see  a  good  in  evil,  and  a 

hope  In  ill-success.     Para.  1 :  121.     C.  48. 


} 


HATE  — HATED  103 

Hate.     And  just  on  the  verge  where  I  pitched  my  tent,  I  found 

Hate  dwelling  beside.     Pippa  1  :  MT.     C.  137. 
When  I  love  most,  Love  is  disguised  In  Hate.     Pippa  1 :  348. 

C.  137. 
when  Hate  is  surprised  In  Love,  then  I  hate  most.     Pippa 

1  :  348.     C.  137. 
In  recrudescency  of  baffled  hate,  Prepare  to  wring  the  utter- 
most revenge.     R.  and  B.  3  :  14.     C.  419. 
when  the  drunkenness  of  hate  Hiceuped  return  for  hospitality. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  48.     C.  433. 
Came  slow  distilment  from  the  alembic  here  Set  on  to  simmer 

by  Canidian  hate.     R.  and  B.  3  :  61.     C.  438. 
Looks  out  his  whole  heart's  hate  on  the  shut  eyes.  Draws  a 

deep  satisfied  breath,  "  So  —  dead   at  last  ! "     R.  and  B. 

3  :  137.     C.  468. 
pricked  at  heart  By  some  lust,  letch  of  hate  against  his  wife. 

R.  and  B.  3 :  229.     C.  505. 
love  their  love  That  bites  and  claws  like  hate,  or  hate  their 

hate  That  mops  and  mows.     R.  and  B.  3  :  232.     C.  507. 
hate  of  you  two  dearest  ones  I  shall  find  liker  love  than  love 

found  here.     R.  and  B.  3  :  266.     C.  520. 
Successively  wrenched   from   pillar   and  from  post  By  this 

tenacious  hate  of  fortune,  hate  Of  all  things  in,  under,  and 

above  earth.     R.  and  B.  3  :  443.     C.  588. 
hate !     Hate  !  honest,  earnest,  and  directest  hate.      Ari.  A. 

5  :  153.     C.  649. 
Hate  adopts  Love  's  '  sweet '  and  '  dear,'  when  '  rogue'  and 

'wretch' fall  flat.     Ari.A.h:im.     C.  651. 
From   the   black-blooded    brow,   anger   and   hate    Convulse. 

/nn^.  5:276.     C.  786. 
All,  for  a  purpose  of  hate,  re-framed,  re-fashioned,  refitted. 

Ixion  6  :  208.     C.  916. 
Oh,  sages  have  discovered  we  are  born  For  various  ends  —  to 

love,  to  know  :  has   ever  One  stumbled,  in  his   search,  on 

any  signs  Of  a  nature  in  us  formed  to  hate  ?     To  hate  ? 

Para.  1 :  89.     C.  36. 
Now  he  is  dead  I  hate  him  worse  :  I  hate  .  .  .  Pippa  1 :  335. 

C.  132. 
Too  nakedly  you  hate  Me  whom  vou  looked  as  if  you  loved 

once.     R.  and  B.  3  :  160.     C.  478. 
strange  It  is,  my  husband  whom  I  have  not  wronged  Should 

hate  and  harm  me.     R.  and  B.  3  :  206.     C.  496. 
Now,  who  shall  arbitrate  ?     Ten  men  love  what  I  hate,  Shun 

what  I  follow,  slight  what  I  receive.      Ben  Ezra  4  :  189. 

C.  385. 
to  obtain  the  strong  true  product  of  a  man.  Set  him  to  hate  a 

little  !     Fifine  4  :  417.     C.  721. 
Hated.     Say  that  I  hated  her  for  no  one  cause  Beyond  my 

pleasure  so  to  do.     R.  and  B.  3  :  435.     C.  585. 


104  HATERS  — HEART 

Haters,     where  the  haters  meet  lu  the  crowded  city's  horrible 

street.     Flight  2  :  304.     C.  277. 
that  army  of  haters  —  set  To  mimic  love's  fever-fret.     Bad  D. 

II.  6  :  395  ;  7  :  17.     C.  989. 
Haunted.     I  should  die  outright  in  a  haunted  house.     Mary 

W.  6  :  20G.     C.  916. 
Have.     I  shall  have  her  for  evermore  !    Lovers'  Q.  2  :  31.    C.  174. 
One  cannot  both  have  and  not  have,  you  know.     11.  and  B. 

3:245.     Coll. 
Head.     Oh,  but  one  sip 's  enough  !     I  want  my  head  To  save 

my  neck,  there  's  work  awaits  me  still.     R.  and  B.  3  :  143. 

C.  471. 
Head  —  to   look   up   not   downwards,   hand  —  of   power   To 

make  head's  gain  the  portion  of  a  world.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  332. 

C.  9G6. 
Headstone.      Headstone  and   half-sunk  footstone   lean  awry. 

Earth's  Im.  2:20.     C.  170. 
Healing.     In  His  face  Is  light,  but  in  His  shadow  healing  too. 

B.  and  B.  3  :  276.     C.  524. 
Health.     The  convent-quiet  preyed  upon  her  health.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  172.     C.  483. 

Healthy.     A  healthy  spirit  like  a  healthy  frame  Craves  ali- 
ment in  plenty.     Sor.  1  :  294.  C.  114. 
Heart.     O   God,   the   despicable  heart   of   us  !      Para.    1  :  50. 

C.  21. 

All,  one  can't  tear  out  one's  heart  And  show  it,  how  sincere  a 

thing  it  is  !     Straf.  1  :  142.     C.  54. 
Face  of  flesh.  But  heart  of  stone  —  of  smooth  cold  frightful 

stone  !     Straf.  1  :  151.     C.  58. 
What  heart  Have  I  to  play  my  puppets,  bear  mj'  part.     Sor. 

1  :  195.     C.  75. 

Would  you  have  your  songs  endure  ?     Build  on  the  human 

heart  !     Sor.  1  :  233.     C.  90. 
my   heart,   convulsed    to   really   speak,  Lay   choking   in   its 

pride.     By  Fire.  2  :  64.     C.  186. 
This  is  a  heart  the  Queen  leant  on.     Miscon.  2  :  73.     C.  189. 
You  cannot  know  the  good  and  tender  heart.  Its  girl's  trust 

and  its  woman's  constancy.     A  Blot  2  :  148.     C.  218. 
Presagefully    it    beats,    presagefuUy,    My    heart.       Colombe 

2  :  204.     C.  240. 

When  have  I  made  pretension  to  your  heart  ?     I  give  none. 

Colombe  2  :  226.     C.  249. 
But  when  the  heart  suffers  a  blow.  Will  the  pain  pass  so  soon, 

do  you  know  ?     Glove  2  :  250.     C.  257. 
What  heart  alike  conceived  and  dared  ?     Last  Ride  2  :  280. 

C.  268. 
It  is  thy  hand.  Thy  foot  that  glows  when  in  the  heart  fresh 

blood  Boils  up,  thou  heart  of  me  !     Luria  2  :  392.     C.  311. 


HEART  — HEARTS  105 

Heart.     I  used  to  hold  by  the  instructed  brain,  .  .  .  The  heart 

leads  siuelier.     Luria  2  :  400.     C.  314. 
Offers  the  hole  in  his  heart,  all  fresh  and  warm.  For  scrive- 
ner's  pen   to   poke   and   play  about.     It.    and  B.  3 :  131. 

C.  4G6. 
How,  Sir  ?     So  scant  of  heart  and  hope  indeed  ?     R.  and  B. 

3 : 151.     C.  474. 
Let  her  coine  break  her  heart  uj^on  my  breast,  Not  on  the 

blank   stone   of   my   nameless   tomb !     R.  and   B.  3 :  187. 

C.  489. 
a  whole  store  of  strengths  Eating  into  my  heart,  which  craved 

employ.     R.  and  B.  3  :  200.     C.  494. 
Reflect  that  God,  who  makes  the  storm  desist,  Can  make  an 

angry  violent  heai't  subside.     R.  and  B.  3  :  261.     C.  518. 
The  angry  heart  explodes,  bears  off  in  blaze  The  indignant 

soul,  and  I  'm  combustion-ripe.     it.  and  B.  3  :  414.     C.  576. 
Look  in  your  own  heart,  if  your  soul  have  eyes !     R.  and  B. 

3:417.     C.  578. 
You  turn  your  face,  but  does  it  bring  your  heart  ?     Andrea 

4  :  83.     C.  346. 
Where   the    heart   lies,   let   the   brain  lie   also.     One    Word 

4  :  124.     C.  361. 
You,  step  inside  my  inmost  heart !     Give  me  your  own  heart  : 

let  us  have  one  heart !     In  a  B.  4:-.  144.     C.  369. 
My  heart  shrivels  up  and  my  spirit  shrinks  curled.     J.  Lee 

4  :  155.     C.  373. 
To  praise  my  face  is  well,  But,  who  would  know  my  worth, 

must  search  my  heart  to  tell !     Fifine  4  :  394.     C.  708. 
The  heart  was  wise  according  to  its  ligiits  And  limits  ;  but 

the  head  refused  more  sun,  And  shrank  into  its  mew,  and 

craved  less  space.     Red  Cott.  5  :  92.     C.  771. 
My  heart  burned  up  within  me  to  my  tongue.     Ari.  A.  5  :  138. 

C.  643. 
heart 's  to  dose.  Palsied  by  over-palpitation  due  To  Woman- 
worship.     Inn  A.  5  :301.     C.  796. 
stir  of  heart  That  unsubduably  must  bubble  forth  To  match 

the  fawn-step.     Inn  A.  5  :314.     C.  801. 
Unlock  my  heart  with  a  sonnet-key  ?     House  5  :  336.     C.  808. 
I  thought  you  gave  Your  heart  and  soul  away  from  me  to 

slave  At  statecraft.     Forgiv.  5  :  366.     C.  820. 
Heart-break.     Head-break  to  him  will  be  heart-break  to  you. 

Red  Cott.  5  :  26.     C.  746. 
doctors  have  their  name  for  the  disease  ;  I,  you,  and  God  say 

—  heart-break,  nothing  more  !     Red  Cott.  5  :55.     C.  757. 
And   torn   his  garb  and   bloody  his    lips    with   heart-break. 

Mar.  Rel.  6  :  122.     C.  877. 
Hearts,     hearts  that  all  awry  went  pit-a-pat  And  wanted  setting 

right  in  charity.     R.  and  B.  3  :  60.     C.  438. 


lOG  HEARTS  — HEAVEN 

Hearts.    From  where  these  sorts  of  treasures  are,  There  should 
our  hearts  be  —  Christ,  how  far.     Shop  5  :  341.     C.  810. 
Hearts  that   bled  are   stauched  with  balm.     Herve  5  :  357. 
C.  816. 
Hearted.     Athenai,  live  thou  hearted  in  my  heart.     Ari.  A. 

5 : 99.     C.  628. 
Heartleaps.      could    heartleaps    but    tarry  !      Fust    6 :  382. 

C.  986. 
Heaven.     In  the  morning  of  the  world,  When  earth  was  nigher 
heaven  than  now.     Pippa  1  :  356.     C.  140. 
Oh,   heaven   and    the    terrible    crystal !      Englishm.  2 :  260. 

C.  261. 
We  all  aspire  to  heaven  ;  and  there  lies  heaven  Above  us  : 
go   there  !     Dare  we  go  ?  no,  surely  !    Soul's  Tr.   2  :  341. 
C.  291. 
And  he  died,  heaven,  save  by  his  heart,  unreached  ?     R.  and 

B.  3  :  31.     C.  426. 

heaven  my  fancy  lifts  to,  ladder-like,  —  As  Jack  reached, 
holpen  of  his  beanstalk-rungs  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  31.     C.  426. 

In  heaven  we  have  the  real  and  true  and  sure.  'T  is  there 
they   neither   marry   nor   are   given.     R.   and  B.   3 :  278. 

C.  525. 

Pouring  heaven  into  this  shut  house  of  life.     Trans.  4  :  58. 

C.  336. 
Heaven  opened  to  a  soul  while  yet  on  earth.     Karsh.  4 :  67. 

C.  339. 
Their   works    drop    groundward,    but   themselves,    I    know, 

Reach  many  a  time  a  heaven  that 's  shut  to  me.     Andrea 

4  :  84.     C.  346. 
Though  earth  were  unworthy  to  feel  your  feet,   There 's  a 

heaven    above    may   deserve  your    love.       Worst    4 :  170. 

C.  378. 
And  the  emulous  heaven  yearned  down,  made  effort  to  reach 

the  earth.     Abt  F.  4  :  183.     C.  382. 
Heaven   is,   through    Eternity,   The    equalizing,  .  .  .  Omni- 
science  with    intelligeucy,   God    With   man.      Prince    H. 

4  :  344.     C.  687. 
"Heaven,"  saith    the   sage,  is   with  us,  "here    inside  Each 

man  :  "  "  Hell  also,"  simpleness  subjoins.     Red  Cott.  5  :  13. 

C.  741. 
Heaven  early  favored  France.     Red  Cott.  5  :  28.     C.  747. 
( —  well,  the  time  For  choosing  between  heaven  on  earth,  and 

heaven  In  heaven,  was  not  at  hand  immediately.)      Red 

Cott.  5  :  34.     C.  749. 
there  is  Heaven,  since  there  is  Heaven's  simulation — earth. 

/«?i  yl.  5:286.     C.  790. 
heaven    repairs    what    wrong    earth's    journey    did.    Bifur. 

5:346.     C.  812. 


HEAVEN  — HELL'S  107 

Heaven.     Had  I  no  experience  how  a  lip's  mere  tremble,  Look's 

half  hesitation,  cheek's  just  change  of  color,  These  effect  a 

heartquake,  —  how  should  I  conceive  What  a  heaven  there 

may  be  ?     Epil.  Two  Cam.  6  :  263.     C.  938. 
Hebrevr.     Called  "  Sepher  Toldoth  Yeschu  :  "  God  be  praised, 

I  read  no  Hebrew,  —  take  the  thing  on  trust.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  343.     C.  549. 
Hedgerovrs.      Hedgerows   for    me  —  those   living  hedgerows 

where  The  bushes  close  and  clasp  above  and  keep  Thought 

in  —  I  am  concentrated  —  I  feel.     Pau.  1  :  19.     C.  9. 
Heifer.  As  heifer  —  the  old  simile  comes  pat  —  Eyes  tremblingly 

the  altar  and  the  priest.     R.  and  B.  3  :  425.     C.  581. 
Heights.    Other  heights  in  other  lives,  God  willing  :  All  the  gifts 

from  all  the  heights,  your  own,  Love  !    One  Word  4  :  127. 

C.  363. 
Heir,     heir  To    the  stubWe  once  a  cornfield,   and    brick-heap 

Where   used  to  be  a  dwelling-place.     R.  and  B,  3  :  77. 

C.  444. 
Hell,     a  coal-black  giant  flower  of  hell !     Her.  Trag.  2  :  316. 

C.  281. 
loop  of  hell  Whence  a  damned  soul  looks  on  paradise  !     Stat. 

and  B.  2  :  323.     C.  284. 
Earth   was  made  hell  to  me  who  did  no  harm  :     R.  and  B. 

3  :  98.     C.  453. 
libertinage,  disease,  the  grave  —  Hell  in  life  here,  hereafter  life 

in  hell.     R.  and  B.  3  :  111.     C.  458. 
You  fled  a  hell  of  your  own  lighting-up,  Pay  for  your  own 

miscalculation  too.     R.  and  B.  3  :  119.     C.  4G1. 
blotting  out,  as  by  a  belch  of  hell.  Their  triumph  in  her  misery 

and  death.     R.  and  B.  3  :  123.     C.  463. 
Hell  thawed  that  icicle,  else  "  Why  was  it  —  Why  ?  "  asked 

and  echoed  the  fools.     R.  and  B.  3  :  125.     C.  464. 
Hell  broke  loose  on  a  butterflv  !  A  dragon  born  of  rose-dew 

and  the  moon  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  141.     C.  470. 
In  heaven  that 's  turned  to  hell,  or  hell  returned  (So,  rather, 

say)  to  this  same  earth  again.     R.  and  B.  3  :  186.     C.  488. 
Is  red-hot  henceforth  past  distinction  now  I'  the  common  glow 

of  hell.     R.  and  B.  3  :  373.     C.  560. 
just  the  bunch  of  withered  weed   AVonld  brighten  hell  and 

streak  its  smoke  with  flame  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  407.     C.  574. 
ringing  as  it  runs  All  the  way  down  the  serpent-stair  to  hell ! 

R.  and  B.  3  :  439.     C.  587. 
hell,  eruptive    and   fuliginous.  Sickens    to  very  pallor.     Red 

Cott.  5  :  41.     C.  752. 
That   I   call    Hell  ;    why   further    punishment  ?       Camel-D. 

6  :  260.     C.  937. 
Hell's.  And  hell's  worm  gnaw  the  glozing  knave.   Druses  2  :  133. 

C.  212. 


108  HELL'S  — HERO-SHAM 

Hell's.      One  master-squeeze  from  screw  shall   bring  to  birth 

The  hoard  i'  the  heart  o'  the  toad,  hell's  quintessence.    R. 

and  B.  3  :  63.     C.  439. 
Help.     The  proper  help  of  friends  in  such  a  strait  Is  waggery, 

the  world  over.     R.  and  B.  3  :  51.     C.  434. 
Leave  help  to  God  as  I  am  forced  to  do  !     There  is  no  other 

help  or  we  should  craze.     R.  and  B.  3  :  261.     C.  518. 
starting  for  the  life-chance  in  our  world,  With  nearly  all  we 

count  sufficient  help.     R.  and  B.  3  :  365.     C.  557. 
Help  that  hinders,  hindrance  proved  but  help  disguised  when 

all  too  late.     La  S.  6  :  61.     C.  852. 
Thanks  for  the  well-timed  help  that 's  born,  behold,  Out  of 

thy  words.     Shah  A.G:  245.     C.  931. 
Do  thy  day's  work,  dare  Refuse  no  help  thereto,  since  help 

refused  Is  hindrance  sought  and  found.     Two  Cam.  6  :  261. 

C.  938. 
You  golden  creature,  will  you  help  us  all  ?     A  Blot  2  :  150. 

C.  219. 
I  help  men  to  carry  out  their  own  principles  :  if  they  please 

to  say  two  and  two  make  five,  I  assent.     SouVs  Tr.  2  :  354. 

C.  296. 
We  are  the  over-ready  to  help  Law —  Zeal  of  her  house  hath 

eaten  us  up.     R.  and  B.  3  :  299.     C.  532. 
"Help  for  honor's  sake,  Play  the  man,  pity  the  oppressed  !" 

—  no  pause.     R.  and  B.  3':  390.     C.  567. 
Help  me  with  knowledge  —  for  Life  's  Old  —  Death  's  Xew  ! 

Epitaph.     C.  948. 
Helped.     Thou,  whom  these  eyes  saw  never  !    Say  friends  true 

Who  say  my  soul,  helped   onward  by  my  song,  Though  all 

unwittingly,  has  helped  thee  too  ?     Epitaph.     C.  948. 
Helpless,     she  the    helpless,  simple-sweet    Or  silly-sooth,  un- 
skilled to  break  one  blow.     R.  and  B.  3  :  86.     C.  448. 
Helplessness.     And,  think  you,  will  the  unkind  ones  hesitate 

To  trv  conclusions  with  my  helplessness.     Red  Cott.  5  :  89. 

C.  770. 
Hemmed.     The   woman,  hemmed   in   by   her   household-bars. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  85.     C.  447. 
Heretics.      Gainsay  ye  ?      Let  me   hear  who  dares  gainsay  ! 

I  hope  we  still  can  punish  heretics  !      R.  and  B.  3 :  333. 

C.  545. 
Hero.     What  I  seem  to  myself,  do  you  ask  of  me  ?     No  hero, 

I  confess.     Light  W.  2  :  278.     C.  267. 
Hero   and    welcome  —  only,  not   on  me  Make    trial   of  your 

'prentice-hand  !     Inn  A.'o  :  248.     C.  775. 
Sing  me  a  hero  !     Quench  my  thirst  Of  soul,  ye  bards  !    Tray 

6  :  142.     C.  887. 
Hero-sham.     Renounce  this    rag-and-feather   hero-sham,  This 

poodle  dipt  to  pattern,  lion-like  !     Inn  A.  5  :  294.     C.  794. 


HERODOTUS  — HOLY  109 

Herodotus.     How    history  proves  .  .  .  nay,  read  Herodotus  ! 

R.  and  B.3:7.     C.  417. 
Hers.     And  I  was  hers  to  live  or  to  die.    Flight  2  :  305.     C.  277. 
Hest.     They  did  my  hest  as  iinrelnctantly,  At  promise  of  a  dol- 
lar, as  a  son,     R.  and  B.  3  :  445.     C.  589. 
Hides.     One  doubtful  act  hides  far  too  many  sins  ;  It  can  be 

stretched  no  more.     Slraf.  1  :  147.     C.  5G. 
High.     The  high  that  proved  too  high,  the  heroic  for  earth  too 

hard.     Abt  F.  4  :  185.     C.  383. 
This   high  man,  with   a  great   thing  to  pursue,  Dies  ere  he 

knows  it.     Gram.  Fun.  2  :  312.     C.  280. 
Climb  high,  love  high,  what  matter  ?     Still,  Feet,  feelings, 

must  descend  the  hill.     D\s  Al.^:  175.     C.  380. 
Better  have  failed  in  the  high  aim,  as  I,  Than  vulgarly  in  the 

low  aim  succeed,     hin  A.  5  :  285.     C.  790. 
High-bred,     the  haiight  high-bred  hearing  and  dispose.     Inn  A. 

5  :  250.     C.  776. 
Higher.     Higher  than  wistful  eagle's  horny  eye  Ever  unclosed 

for,  'mid  ancestral  crags.     R.  and  i>.  3  :  31.     C.  426. 
Hills.     The  hills,  like  giants  at  a  hunting,  lay.  Chin  upon  hand, 

to  see  the  game  at  bay.     Childe  R.  2  :  336.     C.  289. 
a  ridge  of  short  sharp  broken  hills  Like  an  old  lion's  cheek 

teeth.     Karshish  4  :  70.     C.  340. 
Him.     Him   I    thank,  —  but   for   whose   work,   the   orchard's 

wealth  Might  prove  so  many  gall-nuts.     Bean-St.  6  :  282. 

C.  946. 
Hindrance,     for  mankind  springs  Salvation  by  each  hindrance 

interposed.     They  climb.     Sor.  1:313.     C.  122. 
thus  Through  each  familiar  hindrance  of  the  day  Did  I  make 

steadily  for  its  hour  and  end.    R.  and  B.  3  :  214.     C.  499. 
Hindrance  is  the  fact  acknowledged,  howsoe'er  explained  as 

Fate,  Fortune,  Providence.     La  S.  6  :  61.     C.  852. 
Hint.     Or   simply   here  and   there,    (The  while   you  vault   it 

through  the   loose  and  large)  Hang  to  a  hint  ?     R.  and  B. 

3:11.     C.  418. 
Hints,     half-borne-out  assertions,  dubious  hints  Hereafter  to  be 

cleared,  distortions.      Straf.  1  :  177.     C.  68. 
History.     Here  History  keeps  shop.  Tells  how  past  deeds  were 

done,  so  and  not  otherwise.     Fi^fine  4  :  434.     C.  730. 
It  makes  a  man  despair  of  history,  Eusebius  and  the  estab- 
lished fact  — fig's  end  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  107.     C.  456. 
History's.      Here,  clarity  of  candor,  history's  soul.  The  crit- 
ical mind,  in  short:   no  gossip-guess.      it.   and   B.  3:21. 

C.  423. 
Holy.      teach   New  generations  .  .  .  The   pavement    of    the 

street  is  holy  ground.     R.  and  B.  3:^11.     C.  559. 
Be  holy  still,  And  stupid  ever  !     Occupy  your  patch  Of  pri- 
vate snow.    R.  and  B.  3  :  419.     C.  591. 


110  HOMAGE  — HOXORS 

Homage.     Absit  such  homage  to  vile  flesh  and  blood  !     R.  and 

7J.  3:291.     C.  530. 
Home.     And  men  and  children,  —  ay,  and  women  too,  Fighting 
for  home,  are  rather  to  be  feared  Than  mercenaries  fight- 
ing for  their  pay.     Col ombe  2  :  206.     C.  241. 
since  beneath  my  roof  Housed  she  who  made  home  heaven,  in 

heaven's  behoof  I  went  forth.     Forgiv.  5  :  359.     C.  817. 
Wherever  man  has  made  himself  a  home,  .  .  .  there  I  find 
the  story  of  onr  race  In  little.     Two  Poets  6  :81.     C.  8G0. 
Home-contrivances.     The  comic  of  those  home-contrivances 
When  the  old  lady-mother's  wit  was  taxed.     R.  and  B. 
3  :  48.     C.  433. 
Home-joy.    Commend  me' to  home-joy,  the  family  board,  Altar 
and  hearth  !    These,  with  a  brisk  career.   R.  and  B.  3  :  280. 
C.  525. 
Home-sick,     was  home-sick,  yearned  for  the  old  sights  And 
usual  faces,  —  fain  would  settle  himself.     R.  and  B.  3  :  74. 
C.  443. 
Home-thrust.     Here  you  put  by  mv  guard,  pass  to  my  heart 

By  the  home-thrust.     R.  and  B.  3  :  113.     C.  459. 
Honest.     He  's  honest  too,  Limpidly  truthful.     For  ability  — 
All 's  in  the  rough  yet.     Inn  ^ .  5  :  271.     C.  784. 
Is  this  the  honest  self-forgetting  rage  We  are  called  to  par- 
don ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  140.     C.  470. 
Honor,     honor   which,  tender   in  the   extreme,  Stung   to   the 
quick,  must  roughly  right  itself.     R.  and  B.  3  •.7.     C.  417. 
To  save  mv  honor  which  is  more  than  life.     I  exercised  a  hus- 
band's rights.     R.  and  B.  3  :  104.     C.  4.55. 
Get  honor,  and  keep  honor  free  from  flaw.  Aim  at  still  higher 
honor,  —  gabble  o'  the  goose  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  153.     C.  475. 
Honor  in  us  had  injury,  we  prove.     R.  and  B.  3  :  288.    C.  529. 
Honor  is  a  gift  of  God  to  man  Precious  beyond  compare.     R. 

and  B.  3 -.289.     C.  529. 
Nice  sense  of  honor  in  the  human  breast  Supersedes  here  the 

old  coarse  oracle.     R.  and  B.  3  :  399.     C.  571. 
ere  I  found  what  honor  meant,  lost  mine.     Red  Cott.  5  :  89. 
C.  770. 
Honor's,    who  so  fit  As  honor's  self  to  cover  shame's  arch-deed? 
A  Blot  2  :  165.     C.  225. 
No  dubious  salve  to  honor's  broken  pate.     R.  and  B.  3  :  57. 

C.  436. 
Renounce  arbitrament,  flying  out  of  court,  And  crying  '  Hon- 
or's hurt  the  sword  must  cure  '  ?   R.  and  B.  3  :  105.    C.  455. 
Ourselves   had   toiled   for  simple   honor's  sake  :  .  .  .  clowns 
want  dirt  they  comprehend,  .  .  .  gold  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  312. 
C.  538. 
Honors.     There  are  flashes  struck  from  midnights,  .  .  .  Where- 
by piled-up  honors  perish.     Crist.  2  :  18.     C.  169. 


HONORS  — HOTTEST  HI 

Honors.     And  winced  at  pin-pricks  whereby  honors  hang  A 
ribbon  o'er  eacli  puncture.     R.  and  B.  3  :  74.     C.  443. 
Wealth  fails  to  tempt  thee  :  what  if  honors  prove  More  effica- 
cious ?     Doctor  G  :  185.     C.  908. 
Hope,     low  and  weak  yet  full  of  hope,  and  sure  Of  goodness  as 
of  life.     Pau.  1:3.     C.  3. 
Shutting  out  fear  with  all  the  strength  of  hope.     Para.  1 :  G2. 

C.  2G. 
hope  ...  a  new  one,  straight  to  the  selfsame  mark,  I  shape 

me  —  Ever  Removed  !     Life  in  L.  2  :  81.     C.  192. 
left  alone  And  famished  with  the  emptiness  of  hope.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  40.     C.  430. 

—  Through  what  sustainment  of  deluding  hope  ?    R.  and  B. 

3  :  434.     C.  585. 
A  tingling  time  of  hope  was  ours.     In  a  B.  4:1 148.     C.  371. 
My  own  hope  is,  a  sun  will  pierce  The  thickest  cloud  earth 

ever  stretched.     App.  Fail.  4  :  258.     C.  413. 
Nip  these  foolish  fronds  Of  hope  a-sprout.     Doctor  6  :  183. 

C.  906. 

Hope    waves    a-top  Her  wings   triumphant !      Joch.  6 :  230. 

C.  926. 
since  lamplight  dies  in  noontide,  hope  Loses  itself  in  certainty. 

Bean-St.  6  :  272.     C.  942. 
Hope,  well-nigh  ere  birth  Came  to  Desire,  died  off  all-unful- 
filled.    Bea.  Sig.  6  :  413  ;  7  :  59.     C.  996. 
all  men  hope,  and  see  their  hopes  Frustrate,  and  grieve  awhile, 

and  hope  anew.     A  Blot  2  :  169.     C.  226. 
Hoped.     What  men  lack.  And  labor  to  obtain,  is  hoped  and 

feared  about  After  a  fashion.     Fifine  4  :  398.     C.  710. 
Once  to  have  hoped  is  no  matter  for  scorning !     Apol.  and  F. 

6 : 292.     C.  951. 
Horrid.     I  know  it 's  horrid,  hideous  past  belief.  Burdensome 

far  beyond  what  eye  can  bear.     R.  and  B.  3  :  36.     C.  428. 
Horror.   Wake  in  a  horror  of  heart-beats,  you  may.    R.  and  B. 

3  :  250.     C.  514. 
And  what  this  horror  that  grows  palpable  ?     In  a  B.  4c:  151. 

C.  372. 
Horror    coquetting    with    voluptuousness.      Forgiv.    5 :  364. 

C.  819. 
Horse.   Called  my  Roland  his  pet-name,  my  horse  without  peer. 

Hoio  2:5.     C.  165. 
One  stiff  blind  horse,  his  every  bone  a-stare.  Stood  stupefied. 

ChildeR.  2:332.     C.  287. 
So  have  I  brought  my  horse,  by  word  and  blow.  To  stand 

stock-still  and  front  the  fire  he  dreads.     R.  and  B.  3  :  427. 

C.  582. 
Hottest.     My  comfort  is  that  God  reserves  for  him  Hell's  hot- 
test. .  .  Ca7tiel-D.  6:257.    C.  936. 


112  HOUND  —  HUNTED 

Hound.     All  things  conspire  to  hound  me  on  !  Not  now,  my 

soul,  draw  back,  at  least  !     Druses  2  :  120.     C.  206. 

Hour,     each  hour  throws  forth  its  silk-slight  film  Between  the 

being  tied  to  you  by  birth.  And  you.   A  Blot  2  :  162.    C.  224. 

We  have  to  spend  An  hour  —  they  want  a  lifetime  thrown 

away.     Bed  Cott.  5  :  33.     C.  748. 

Hour-glass.     Noondav-hour's  exact  sand  Shows  the  hour-glass 

emptied.     Flute-M.  0  :421  ;  7  :  75.     C.  1000. 
Hours,     long   blue    solemn   hours    serenely   flowing,    Whence 

earth,  we  feel,  gets  steady  help.     Pippa  1:327.     C.  129. 
House.     The  house  for  me,  no  doubt,  were  a  house  in  the  city- 
square.      Up  —  Down  2  :  32.     C.  174. 
You  keep  the  house  i'  the  main,  as  most  men  do  And  all  good 

women.     R.  and  B.  3  :63.     C.  439. 
this  old  house  —  Everv  crumbling  brick  embrowned  with  sin 
and  shame  !     Epil  Fif.  4  :  443.     C.  735. 
HouseTvife's.     A  careful   housewife's  beaming  bustling  face. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  113.     C.  459.  ) 

Hug.     he  handled  it  so,  in  fine  irreverence,  As  to  bug  the  book 

of  books  to  pieces.     Chris.-Eve  4:4.     C.  317. 
Humble,     his  —  no   soul    Ecclesiastic  .  .  .  Humble    but  self- 
sustaining,  calm  and  cold.     R.  and  B.  3  :  74.     C.  443. 
The  humble  holy  heart  that  holds  of  new-born  pride  no  spice  ! 
Pope  and  N.  6  :  402  ;  7  :  33.     C.  992. 
Human.     I  was  a  human  creature  too.  With  flesh  and  blood 
like  one  of  you.      Confess.  2  :  16.     C.  169. 
A   busv  human    sense   beneath   my  feet.     R.   and  B.  3  :  12. 

C.  419. 
human  at  the  red-ripe  of  the  heart.    R.  and  B.  3  :  32.    C.  427. 
All   human  plans  and  projects  come  to  naught.     R.   and  B. 

3  :  257.     C.  516. 
This  lesson,  that  our  human  speech  is  naught.  Our  human  tes- 
timonv  false,  our  fame   And  human  estimation  words  and 
wind.  ■'  R.  and  B.  3  :  477.     C.  601. 
What  is  she  ?     Her  human  self,  —  no  lower  word  will  serve. 
Poetics  6  :  393  ;  7 :  10.     C.  988. 
Humanity.      Love,  hope,  fear,  faith  —  these  make  humanity. 
Pora.  1:84.     C.  34. 
all  this  humanity.  Diverse  but  ever  dear.     Prince  H.  4 :  346. 

C.  688. 
a   wise    humanitv,    Slow  to  conceive  but   duteous   to   adopt. 

Fam%  6:248."^    C.  932. 
humanitv.  Wrong-headed  yet  right-hearted,  rash  but  kind. 
Family  6  :  248.     C.  932. 
Hundred-petalled.     the  hundred-petalled  Provence  prodigy  ? 

R.  and  B.  3  :  428.     C.  582. 
Hunted,     we  who  make  Sport  for  the  gods,  are  hunted  to  the 
end.     Para.  1  :  78.     C.  32. 


HURRICANE  — ICE  113 

Hurricane.     One  hurricane  will  spoil  six  good  months'  hope. 

Caliban  4  :  211.     C.  393. 
Hurt,     such   mere  hurt   falls,  Frets  awhile,  aches   long,  then 
grows  less  and  less,  And  so  gets  done  with.     it.  and  B. 
3  :  Gl.     C.  438. 
Husband.    The  husband  trooping  after,  piteously,  Tail  between 
legs,  no  talk  of  triumph  now.     R.  and  B.  3  :  oG.     C.  43G. 
A  husband  poor,  care-bitten,  sorrow-sunk,  Little,  long-nosed, 

bush-bearded,  lantern-jawed.     R.  and  B.  3  :  122.     C.  4G2. 
for  husband  to  chastise, —  Mildly  of  course,  —  but  natural  right 

is  right.     R.  and  B.  3  :  124.     C.  4G3. 
Here  is  a  husband,  cannot  rule  his  wife  Without  provoking 

her  to  scream  and  scratch.     R.  and  B.  3  :  133.     C.  4G7. 
For  that  most  woful  man  my  husband  once.  Who,  needing  re- 
spite, still  draws  vital  breath.     R.  and  B.  3 :  275.     C.  524. 
The  proper  piety  to  lord  and  king  And  husband  :  let  the  heifer 

bear  the  yoke  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  325.     C.  542. 
No  matter  whether  wife  be  true  or  false,  The  husband  must 
not  push  aside  the  law.     R.  and  B.  3  :  473.     C.  COO. 
Husband's,     your  husband's  friend,  your  husband's  self  :  At 
such  appeal  the  door  is  bound  to  ope.     R.  and   B.  3  :  64. 
C.  439. 
Husbands,     the  regular  jealous-fit  that 's  incident  To  all  old 
husbands  that  wed  brisk  young  wives.    R.  and  B.  3  :  51. 
C.  434. 
The  wholesome  household  rule  in  force  again.  Husbands  once 

more  God's  representative.     R.  and  B.  3  :  188.     C.  489. 
Every  one  says  that  husbands  love  their  wives.  Guard  them 
and  guide  them,  give  them  happiness.     R.  and  B.  3 :  240. 
C.  510. 
Hymn,      hymn,  —  Rough,     rude,    robustious  —  homely    heart 
a-throb,  Harsh  voice  a-hallo,  as  beseems  the  mob  !     Chas. 
/I.  6:363.     C.  978. 
Hypocrite,      hypocrite.    To-day,  perchance  to-morrow  recog- 
nized The  rational  man.     R.  and  B.  3  :  399.     C.  570. 
Hypocrite's,     with  change   Of  motley  too,  —  now  hypocrite's 

disguise.  Now  fool's-costume.     R.  and  B.  3  :  381.     C.  563. 
Hypocrites.     Enough  of  the  hypocrites.    But  you.  Sirs,  you  — 
R.  and  B.  3  :  420.     C.  579. 
a   crowd  of   hypocrites    Whose    conscience    means   ambition, 
grudge  and  greed.     Ari.  A.  5 -.IQt^d.     C.  65G. 


I.     And   now.  As   of   old,   I  am   I,  thou   art   thou  !     Gondola 

2  :  265.     C.  263. 
Ice.     And  my  heart  feels  ice  while  my  words  breathe  flame. 

Worst  4  :  173.     C.  379. 


114  ICEBERG  — IGNORANCE 

Iceberg,     an  iceberg  Swimming  fnll  upon  tlie  ship  it  foimders, 
Hungry  with  huge  teeth  of  splintered  crystals  ?     One  Word 

4  :  128.     C.  303. 

Icliabod.     Ichabod,  Ichabod,  The  glory  is  departed  !     Waring 

2  :  272.     C.  265. 
Ideal.     Rescue  me  thou,  the  only  real  !     And  scare  away  this 
mad  ideal.     Gondola  2  :  2GG.     C.  2G3. 
that  prodigious  book  he  wrote  On  Artistry 's  Ideal.     Ger.  de 

L.  6  :  344.     C.  970. 
your  ideal,  your  grand  simple  life,  Of   which  you  will  not 
realize  one  jot.     Bishop  B.  4  :  93.     C.  350. 
Idiots.     (You  '11  see,  I   have   not   so  advanced  myself,  After 
my   teaching   the   two   idiots   here  !)     R.    and   B.  3  :  142. 
C.  471. 
Idleness,     laugh   in   my  tomb   At  idleness  which  aspires   to 
strive.     Stat,  and  B.  2  :  327.     C.  280. 
the  very  fiends  weave  ropes  of  sand  Rather  than  taste  pure 
hell  in  idleness.     Forgiv.  5  :  367.     C.  820. 
Idols.     And  then  know  that  this  curse  will  come  on  us,  To  see 

our  idols  perish.     Pau.  1  :  14.     C.  7. 
Ignoble.      Is  it  not  this  ignoble   confidence,  Cowardly  hardi- 
hood, that  dulls  and  damps,  Makes  the  old  heroism  impos- 
sible ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  397.     C.  570. 
Ignominy,     lest  so  he  superadd  To  loss  of  honor  ignominy  too. 

A',  and  B.  3  :  297.     C.  532. 
Ignoramus,     your  ignoramus  here  again   Proceeds  as  tardily 

to  recognize  Distinctions.     Red  Cott.  5:6.     C.  739. 
Ignorance,     men  have  oft  grown  old  among  their  books  To 
die  case-hardened  in  their  ignorance.     Para.  1  :  44.     C.  19. 
The   careless,    winnuig,   candid   ignorance.     Colombe   2 :  211. 

C.  243. 
impute  the  fault  To  a  soul  i'  the  bud,  so  starved  by  ignorance, 

Stinted  of  warmth.     R.  and  B.  3  :  271.     C.  522. 
Attribute  the   untoward  event  o'  the  strife  To  nothing  but 

my  own  crass  ignorance.     R.  and  B.  3  :  464.     C.  590. 
knowledge  and  power  have  rights.  But  ignorance  and  weak- 
ness have  rights  too.     Bishop  B.  4  :  111.     C.  357. 
With  ignorance  was  surety  of  a  cure.     Death  in  D.  4  :  202. 

C.  390. 
To  raise  your  race,  must  stoop,  —  to  teach  them  aught,  must 

learn  Ignorance.     Fijine  4  :  415.     C.  719. 
Ignorance  is  not  innocence  but  sin.     Inn  ^.5:296.     C.  794, 
ignorance   Being,  I  hold,  sin  ever,  small  or  great.     Inn  A. 

5  :  296.     C.  794. 

Blood,    ne'er  so   cold,   at   ignorance   grows   warm !      Doctor 

6  :  183.     C.  907. 

ignorance  confirmed  By  knowledge  sounds  like  paradox.     Joch. 
6 : 230.     C.  926. 


IGNORANCE  —  IMPOSSIBLE  115 

Ignorance.     This   Be   sure   of  —  ignorance  that  sins,  is  safe. 

No  punishment  like  knowledge  !     Camel-D.  6  :  259.    C.  937. 
that  profound  Of  ignorance  I  tell  jou  surges  round  My  rock- 
spit  of  self-knowledge.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  337.     C.  968. 
Ignorant.     Mankind  is  ignorant,  a  man  am  I :  Call  ignorance 

my  sorrow  not  my  siu  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  302.     C.  556. 
So  ignorant  of  man's  whole  Of  bodily  organs  plain  to  see  — 

So   sage  .  .  .  About  .  .  ,  Man's   soul !      Prol.  Dra.  I.  Id 

6  :  153.     C.  892. 
111.     A  good  thing,  done  unhandsomely,  turns  ill ;  And  never 

yet  lacked  ill  the  law's  rebuke.     R.  and  B.  3  :  297.    C.  532. 
Ills,     neither  ills  We  dread,  nor  joys  we  dare  anticipate,  Per- 
form to  promise.     Ari.  A.  5  :232.     C.  678. 
Illimitable.     Abjure  each  fond  attempt  to  represent  The  form- 
less, the  illimitable  !     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  299.     C.  953. 
Illusion-bubble,     my  last  illusion-bubble  breaks.  My  one  dis- 
covered phcenix  proves  a  goose.     Inn  A.  o:  251.     C.  776. 
Image.     One  image  stamped  within  you,  turning  blauk  The 

else    imperial    brilliance    of    your    mind.      Straf.    1 :  155. 

C.  59. 
mixed   an   image   out   of   his   o\\ti  depths.      Ari.  A.  5:109. 

C.  632. 
Imagery.     That    imagery   of    the   antique    song   Truer    than 

truth's  self.     Ger.  de  L.  G  :  345.     C.  971. 
Imagination,     an  imagination  which  Has  been  a  very  angel. 

Pau.  1:8.     C.  5. 
an  imagination  which  Has  been  an  angel  to  me.     Pau.  1  :  7.* 
Imagination's.      Beyond   The  ugly  actual,  lo,  on   every  side 

Imagination's  limitless  domain.     Ger.  de  L.  6  :  344.    C.  971. 
Imitate.     I  could  not  imitate  —  I  hardly  envy  —  I  do  admire 

you.     All  is  for  the  best.     Colomhe  2  :  230.     C.  250. 
Immensity,      the  absolute  immensity,  the  whole  Appreciable 

solely  by  Thyself.     R.  and  B.  3  :  385.     C.  565. 
Immolation.      The  very  immolation  made  the  bliss ;    Death 

was  the  heart  of  life.     R.  and  B.  3  :  210.     C.  498. 
Impatient.     Who  turns  impatient  at  such  transit-time  —      R, 

and  B.  3  :  326.     C.  542. 
impatient,  ...  At  ignorance  and  carelessness  and  sin.     Kar- 

sJmh  4 :  69.     C.  340. 
Impenitence.     I  thought  you  would  not  slay  impenitence.  But 

teased,   from   men  you   slew,  contrition  first.     R.  and  B. 

3  : 4.52.     C.  592. 
Implacable.     Some  use  There  cannot  but  be  for  a  mood  like 

mine,  Implacable,  persistent  iu  revenge.     R.  and  B.  3  :  450. 

C.  591. 
Importunateness.      Importunateness  —  what   a  privilege    In 

the  ardent  sex  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  337.     C.  547. 
Impossible.     It  seems  absurd,  impossible  to-day  ;  So  seems  so 


116  IMPOSTURE  —  INDIFFERENT 

much  else,  not  explained  but  known  !     li.  and  B.  3  :  277. 
C.  524. 

Imposture.  With  a  Frank's  unimaginable  scorn  Of  such  im- 
posture.    Druses  2  :  115.     C.  204. 

Imprint.  My  nature  cannot  lose  her  first  imprint.  Para. 
1  :  77.     C.  31. 

Imprisonment.  Earth's  ugliest  walled  and  ceiled  imprison- 
ment May  suffer,  througli  its  single  rent  in  roof,  Admit- 
tance of  a  cataract  of  light.     Red  Cott.  5:2.     C.  737. 

Improve.  All  men  do  so  :  they  are  worst  in  childhood,  im- 
prove in  manhood,  and  get  ready  in  old  age  for  another 
world.     SouVs  Tr.  2  :  359.     C.  298. 

Impudence.  impudence  Of  night-hawk  at  first  chance  to 
prowl  and  prey  For  glory  and  a  little  gain  beside.  Prince 
H.  4  :  363.     C.  694. 

Impulse.  Not  one  permissible  impulse  moves  the  man.  R. 
and  B.  3  :  368.     C.  558. 

Impulses.  Man's  inborn  uninstructed  impulses.  His  naked 
spirit  so  majestical  !     Para.  1:116.     C.  46. 

Impulsive.  Stung  to  the  quick  at  her  impulsive  deed,  And 
willing  to  repair  what  harm  it  worked.  R.  and  B.  3  :  338. 
C.  547. 

Impunity,     in  sight  of  Rome  And  safety  (there  's  impunity  at 
Rome  For  priests,  you  know).     R.  and  B.  3  :54.     C.  435. 
The  world  may  have  its  word  to  say  to  that :  You  can't  do 
some  things  with  impunity.     R.  and  B.  3  :  121.     C.  462. 

Inane.     Stupidly   put !     Inane   is   the   response.      R.   and  B. 

3  :  283.     C.  527. 

Incentives,      incentives   come   from  the  soul's  self.      Andrea 

4  :  86.     C.  347. 

Incisive.    Incisive,  nigh  satiric  bites  the  phrase,  Rough-raw,  yet 

somehow  claiming  privilege.     R.  and  B.  3  :  22.     C.  423. 
Incomplete.     Inscribe  all  human  effort  with  one  word,  Artis- 

try's  haunting  curse,  the   Incomplete!    R.  and  B.  3:438. 

C.  586. 
would  love's  success  defeat  Artistry's   haunting  curse — the 

Incomplete  ?     Bea.  Sig.  6  :  412  ;  7:  58.     C.  996. 
Inconsequence.     Each  nerve  must  creep,  each  hair  start,  sting 

and  stand,  At  such  illogical  inconsequence  !      R.  and   B. 

3  : 412.     C.  576. 
Incontinency.     Why  that   displeasure    of   the  bee  to   aught 

Which  savors  of  incontinency.     R.  and  B.  3  :  290.     C.  529. 
Indecision.      no   complaint   of   indecision   more  !     Prince  H. 

4 : 365.     C.  695. 
Indifferent.     Glad,  angry  —  but  indifferent,  no  !     Flight  2:  ZQ^. 

C.  277. 
In  every  man's  career  are  certain  points  Whereon  he  dares 

not  be  indifferent.     Bishop  B.  4  :  98.     C.  351. 


INDIFFERENT  — INJUSTICE  117 

Indifferent.     In  a  doggedest  of  endeavors  to  play  the  indiffer- 
ent.    Sol.  and  B.  G  :  202.     C.  914. 
Indignant.     I  poured  my  heart's  store  of  indignant  words  Out 

on  him.     SouVs  Tr.  2  :  345.     C.  292. 
Individual,     collective   man   Outstrips   the   individual  !     Sor. 

1  :  286.     C.  111. 
Individuality.     Laugh  thou  at  envious  fate,  Who,  .   .  .  stampt 

With  individuality  —  uncrampt  .  .  .  Dost  soar.     Sor.  1  :  205. 

C.  79. 
Indulgence.    —  No  such  indulgence  as  unknits  the  strength  — 

R.  and  B.  3  :  388.     C.  5G6. 
Ineptitude,     blundered    on    ineptitude  !     R,  and   B.    3 :  304. 

C.  535. 
Infallible.     Which  of  the  judgments  was  infallible  ?     Which 

of   my   predecessors   spoke  for   God  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  359. 

C.  555. 
Infamy.     The   honor  of   him  buried   fathom-deep  In  infamy. 

R.  and  B.  3 -.315.     C.  539. 
some  novel  infamy  Unutterable,  inconceivable.    Art.  A.  5  :  125. 

C.  638. 
Infancy.     First,  infancy,  pellucid  as  a  pearl.    R.  and  B.  3  :  324. 

C. 542. 
What 's  infancy  ?     Ignorance,  idleness,  mischief.     Apol.  and 

F.  6  :  287.     C.  949. 
Infinite.     Power  is  known  infinite  :  Good  struggles  to  be  —  at 

best  Seems.     Rev.  6  :  436  ;  7  :  105.     C.  1005. 
Infinitude.      Stationed   face  to   face   with  —  Nature  ?    rather 

with  Infinitude.     La  S.Q:  54.     C.  849. 
Influential.     Plied  influential  folk,  pressed  to  the  ear  Of  the 

efficacious   purple,  pushed   his  way.       R.    and  B.    3  :  100. 

C.  454. 
Ingenuity,    scope  Not  for  brute-force  but  ingenuity.  Explaining 

matters.     R.  and  B.  3  :  286.     C.  528. 
Ingenuous,     the  ingenuous  soul,  the  man  Who  makes  esteem 

of  honor  and  repute.     R.  and  B.  3  :  292.     C.  530. 
Ingrate.     my  whole  soul  growled,  "Rightly    rewarded,  —  In- 

grate  !  "     Don.  6  :  199.     C.  913. 
The    full-blown  ingrate,  mere    recipient    of   the  brine,  That 

takes    all    and   gives     naught,    is     Man.      Fifine    4 :  414. 

C.  719. 
Ingratitude,     ye  have  stabbed  me  with  ingratitude.     St.  Prax. 

4  :  91.     C.  349. 
Ingres.      Ingres 's   the   modern   man   that    paints.      D'ls.    Al. 

4  :  174.     C.  379. 
Injured.    Oh,  to  love  less  what  one  has  injured  !   A  Blot  2  :  156. 

C.  221. 
Injustice.     Part-pavment  for  the  plain  injustice  done.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  83.     C.  447. 


1 18  INK  —  INSTRUCTION 

Ink.     above  all  else,  keep  wives  —  Or  sweethearts  or  what  they 

may  be  —  from  ink  !  now,  ou  your  lives  !    Mar.  liel.  0  :  120. 

C.  87G. 
Inkling.    Steady  in  thy  superb  prerogative.  Thy  inch  of  inkling. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  384.     C.  oG5. 
Innocence.     A  fury-fit  of  outraged  innocence,  A  passion  of  be- 
trayed simplicity.     R.  and  B.  '6  :o,     C.  41G. 
Innocence   often  looks   like   guiltiness.      R.    and   B.    3 :  58. 

C.  437. 
She  was  of  wifehood  one  white  innocence  In  thought,  word, 

act,     R.  and  B.  3  :  138.     C.  4G9. 
In  early  days  of  Eve-like  innocence  That  plucked  no  apple 

from  the  knowledge-tree.     R.  and  B.  3:330.     C.  544. 
Starchedly  warrants  all  beneath  is  matched  By  all  above,  one 

snowy  innocence  !     Red  Cott.  5:9.     C.  740. 
Innocent.     Innocent  by  name  And  nature  too,  and  eighty-six 

years  old,  Antonio  Pignatelli  of  Naples,  Pope.     R.  and  B. 

3:7.     C.  417. 
Innocents,     the  innocents,  the  all-unwary  ones  Who,  eager  to 

profess,  mistook  their  mind  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  159.     C.  477. 
a  pair  of  innocents  Who  thought  their  wedded  hands  not  clean 

enough   To  touch  and   leave  unsullied   their  souls'  snow  I 

Red  Cott.  5  :  71.     C.  763. 
Inquiry.     Was  welcomed  by  the  city  turned  upside  down  In  a 

chorus  of  inquiry.     R.  and  B.  3  :  GO.     C.  438. 
Insanity.      This  soul  at  struggle  with   insanity.      Chris.-Eve. 

4  :  30.     C.  326. 
Insect,     this  insect  on  my  parapet.     Look  how  the  marvel  of  a 

minim  crawls  !     Red  Cott.  5  :  78.     C.  766. 
Insects.     The  very  insects  ...  if  they  wive  or  no.  How  dare  I 

say  when  Aristotle  doubts.     R.  and  B.  3  :  290.     C.  529. 
Instalment.     He  would   not  discount  life,  as    fools  do    here. 

Paid  by  instalment.     Gram.  Fun.  2:312.     C.  280. 
Instant.     The     instant     made     eternity.      Last    Ride  2 :  281. 

C.  268. 
Instinct,     the  truth  was  felt  by  instinct  here,  —  Process  which 

saves   a   world   of   trouble  and   time.     R.  and   B.  3  :  128. 

C.  465. 
I  Certainly  have  an  instinct  of  my  own  I'  the  matter.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  231.     C.  507. 
The  honest  instinct,  pent  and  crossed  through  life.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  449.     C.  591. 
Instincts,     certain  instincts,  blind,  unreasoned-out,  You  dare 

not  set  aside.     Bishop  B.  4  :  110.     C.  356. 
certain  hell-deep  instincts,  man's  weak  tongue  Is  never  bold 

to  utter.      Bishop  B.  4  :  114.     C.  358. 
Instruction.     I  want  instruction  every  hour,  I  find,  On  points 

where  once  I  saw  least  need  of  it.     Luria  2  :  380.     C.  30C. 


INSTRUCTION  —  INTERPRET  119 

Instruction.    Here,  after  ignorance,  instruction  speaks.    R.  and 

B.  3  :  21.     C.  423. 

Instruction  !  no  more  horse-play,  naming  names,  Taxing  the 
fancy   when    plain    sense    will   serve  !      Ari.    A.   5 :  143. 

C.  645. 

enjoyment^s  fruit,  Instruction.     Chris.  Sm.  6  :  317.     C.  961. 
Instruments.     Do  you   blame  us  that  we  turn  Law's  instru- 
ments, Not  mere  self-seekers.     R.  and  B.  3  :  298.     C.  532. 
Insult.     I   would  not  dare  insult  a  woman  so,  Were  she  the 

meanest  woman  in  the  world.     In  a  B.  4::  151.     C.  372. 
Insults.     Do  —  devise  Insults  for  one  who,  fallen  once,  ne'er 
shall  rise  !     Dan.  Bar.  6  :  310.     C.  958. 
For   who    insults    an    imbecile    old    man  ?     Druses   2 :  129. 
C.  210. 
Intellect,     the  clear  fine  intellect,  .  .  .  the  cold  acute  instructed 
mind.     Luria  2  :  385.     C.  308. 
Everywhere    I  see  in  the  world   the  intellect  of  man.  That 

sword.     R.  and  B.  3  :  378.     C.  562. 
But  intellect  adjusts  the  means  to  ends.  Tries  the  low  thing, 
and  leaves  it  done,  at  least.     Red  Cott.  5  :  92.     C.  771. 
Intelligence.     Speak   to  the  infinite  intelligence.  Sing  to  the 
everlasting  sympathy  !     Ari.  A.  5  :  104.     C.  630. 
Above  misshapen   body,  uncouth  soul.  Reach  the  fine  form, 

the  clear  intelligence.     Ari.  A.  o  :  130.     C.  640. 
Intelligence  must  move  strength's  self.     Geo.  B.  D.  6  :  322. 
C.  962. 
Intend,     when  I  say  "  I  intend,"  I  can  intend  up  to  a  certain 

point.  No  farther.     King  C.  1  :  400.     C.  157. 
Intense,     any  sort  of  meaning  looks  intense  When  all  beside 
itself  means  and  looks  naught.     Fra  Lippo  4  :  78.     C.  344. 
Intensest.     I   am   made  up  of   an  intensest   life.     Pau.  1  : 7. 

C.  4. 
Intentions.     So  many  men  with  such  various  intentions.    Mas- 
ter H.  2  :  96.     C.  197. 
Interest.     Always  subordinating  .  .  .  Revenge,  the  manlier  sin, 
to  interest  The  meaner.     R.  and  B.  3  :  369.     C.  559. 
Our  interest 's  on  the  dangerous  edge  of  things.     Bishop  B. 
4  :  100.     C.  353. 
Interfere.     Matters   that  high  time  was  to  interfere.  Though 
interference    came    from    hell    itself.     Prince   H.   4 :  377. 
C.  700. 
Interposed.     I   might   have  interposed.  Blunted  the    edge  of 
their  resentment  so.     R.  and  B.  3  :  251.     C.  514. 
How  helpful  could  we  quote  But  one  poor  instance  when  He 
interposed    Promptly  and  surely  and  beyond  mistake  Be- 
tween   oppression    and   its   victim.      Ber.    de   J/.   6  :  296. 
C.  952. 
Interpret,     let  me,  the  hollow  rock,  condense  The  voice  o'  the 


120  INTREPIDITY  — ITALY 

sea  and  wind,  interpret  you  The  mystery.    R.  and  B.  3  :  190. 

C.  490. 
Intrepidity.     His  intrepidity,  nay,  nonchalance,  As  up  he  stood 

and  down  he  sat  himself.  Struck  admiration  into  those  who 

saw.     R.  and  B.  3  :  461.     C.  595. 
Intrigue.   Then  what  need  all  this  trifling  woman's-work.  Letters 

and  embassies  and  weak  intrigue  —      R.  and   B.   3  :  129. 

C.  466. 
the  grotesque  intrigue  To  make  me  and  my  friend  unself  our- 
selves.    R.  and  B.  3  :  252.     C.  515. 
Must  such  external  semblance  of  intrigue  Demonstrate  that 

intrigue  there  lurks  perdue  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  332.    C.  545. 
Intrigues,     that    chaos  of   intrigues.  Those   hopes  and   fears, 

surprises  and  delays.     In  a  B.  4:  :  136.     C.  366. 
Invent.     AVhy  should  one  desire  to  invent,  as  long  as  it  remains 

possible    to   renew   and    transform  ?      Soul's    Tr.   2  :  351. 

C.  295. 
Ire.     That  Revelation  old   and   new  admits   The  natural  man 

may  effervesce  in  ire.     R.  and  B.  3  :  294.     C.  531. 
Ireland.     How  he  turns  Ireland  to  a  private  stage  For  training 

infant  villanies.     Siraf.  1  :  130.     C.  50. 
what  Ireland  bears  England  may  learn  to  bear.     Straf.  1  :  130. 

C.  50. 
Poor   Ireland   bears   Another  wrench  (she  dies    the   hardest 

death  !)    Straf.  1  :  145.     C.  56. 
For  Ireland,  Something  is  done  :  too  little,  but  enough  To  show 

what  might  have  been.     Straf.  1  :  184.     C.  71. 
Irk.     another  time  Would  irk  much,  —  it  may  prove  less  irk- 
some now.     King  C.  1  :  404.    C.  159. 
Irks.     Irks   care    the    crop    full    bird  ?      Ben     Ezra   4 :  186. 

C.  384. 
Irreligion.     only  irreligion  grudged   the  gods  One  naked  glory 

of   their    master-work  .  .  •  The    human  frame.      Ari.  A. 

5 : 165.     C.  654. 
Irreligiousest.     This  is   the  man  proves  irreligiousest  Of  all 

mankind,  religion's  parasite  !     R.  and  B.  3  :366.     C.  5.57. 
Irresolute.     Irresolute  ?     Not  I,  more  than  the  mound  AVith 

the  pine-trees  on  it  yonder !     R.  and  B.  3  :301.     C.  556. 
Isle.     Some  misuspected  isle  in  far-off  seas!      Pippa   1:350. 

C.  138. 
Isles.     Our  isles  Like  cloudlets  faint  in  even  sleeping.     Para. 

1:97.     C.  39. 
Isocrates.   That  famed  panegyric  of  Isocrates,  They  say  it  took 

him  fifteen  years  to  pen.     R.  and  B.  3  :  355.     C.  5.53. 
Italia 's.    Italia's    rare    O'er-running   beauty   crowds   the    eye. 

Prol.  ^.6:390;  7:2.     C.  987. 
Italy.     Open   my  heart  and  you  will  see  Graved  inside  of  it, 

"  Italy."     De  Gus.  2  :  46.     C.  179. 


ITALY  — JESUS  121 

Italy.     It  was  for  Italy  I  feared.     Italian  2  :2o4.     C.  259. 
Italy,  our  mother  ;  she  Uses  my  hand  and  blesses  thee.   Italian 

2  :  255.     C.  259. 
Itch,     the   itch   that   knows  no  cure  But  daily  paper-friction. 

Two  Poets  Q:Q4:.     C.  865. 


Jadestone.  dim  pellucid  green,  Carved,  the  hard  jadestone, 
as  you  pinch  a  bean.  Into  a  sort  of  parrot-bird  !     Forgiv. 

5  :  3G5.     C.  819. 

January,  makes  grufE  January  grin  perforce  !  For  too  conta- 
gious grows  the  mirth,  the  warmth.    R.  and  B.  3  :  279.  C.  525. 

Jaunt.  Vanquished  by  tedium  of  a  prolonged  jaunt  In  a  close 
carriage  o'er  a  jolting  road.     R.  and  B.  3  :  335.     C.  546. 

Jealousy.     Attributes  all  the  so-styled  torture  just  To  jeal- 
ousy.    R.  and  B.  3  :  126.     C.  464. 
Good   cause    for   jealousy   cures   jealous   fools.      R.    and   B. 

3  :  260.     C.  518. 
Have  I  to  teach  my  masters  what  effect  Hath  jealousy,  and 

how,  befooling  men  —     R.  and  B.  3  :  328.     C.  543. 
jealousy,  .  .  .  makes  false  true,  .   .  .  Turns  mere  mist  ada- 
mantine,  loads   with    sound    Silence,   and    into   void  .  .  . 
Crowds  a  whole  phalanx.     R.  and  B.  3  :  328.     C.  543. 
unlucky    husband,  —  jaimdiced    patch,  —  Jealousy    maddens 

people,  why  not  him  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  423.     C.  580. 
Jealousy   who  sidles  'twixt  the  scenes.   Or  pops   up   sudden 
from  the  prompter's  hole.     Red  Colt.  5  :  36.     C.  750. 

Jealousies.  Fine  jealoiisies  soon  stifled  in  the  play  Of  irre- 
pressible admiration.     Sor.  1 :  325.     C.  127. 

Jeer.  'T  is  not  I  only,  not  my  friends  that  joke.  My  foes  that 
jeer,  who  echo  "  inadequate."     R.  and  B.  3  :  185.     C.  488. 

Jeers.  Perhaps  I  shall  elude  those  jeers  which  creep  Into  my 
very  brain,  and  shut  these  scorched  Eyelids  and  keep  those 
mocking  faces  out.     Para.  1: 109.     C.  43. 

Jeopardize.  Folk  fear  to  jeopardize  their  soul.  Stumble  at 
times,  walk  straight  upon  the  whole.  Geo.  B.  D.  6  :  326. 
C.  964. 

Jerboa,  jerboa  ...  a  wonder,  half  bird  and  half  mouse  ! 
Saul  2  :  48.     C.  180. 

Jerome.  Jerome  knocking  at  his  poor  old  breast  With  his 
great  round  stone  to  subdue  the  flesh.  Fra  Lippo  4  :  75. 
C.  343. 

Jest.     What  is  it  you  know  ?     She.  —  That  you  jest  !     Lady 

6  :  406  ;  7  :  45^     C.  994. 

Jesus,  a  sea  Whereon  comes  Someone,  walks  fast  on  the 
white,  Jesus  Christ's  self.     R.  and  B.  3  :  245.     C.  512. 


122  JEWEL  — JOY 

Jewel.     Hath  lived  so  far  (like  jewel  hid  in  muck)  Ou  page  of  ¥ 

that  old  lying  vanity.     R.  and  B.  3  :  343.     C.  549.  ] 

Jewel,  from  each  facet,  flash  your  laugh  at  time  !    Mag.  Nat. 

5  :  346.     C.  812.  j 

Jewelry.     As   thick  with  jewelry  as  thick  could   stick.     Red  ^ 

Cott.  5  :  11.     C.  740. 
Jig.     He  danced  the  jig  that  needs  no  floor.     Ned  B.  6:145. 

C.  889. 
Jochanan.     Our  much-enlightened  master,  Israel's  prop,  Ex- 

imious  Joclianan  Ben  Sabbathai  ?     Joch.  6  :  211.     C.  918. 
Joke.     The  callous  dog,  —  let  who  will  cut  off  head.  He  cuts  a  t 

joke,  and  cares  no  more  than  so  !    R.  and  B.  3  :  475.    C.  600.  } 

Jokes,     turned    A   common  hack-block  to  try  edge  of  jokes. 

R.  and  B.S:  316.     C.  539. 
Jollity.     That  which  lights  bonfire  and  sets  cask  a-tilt,  Dis-  • 

solves  the  stubborn'st  heart  in  joUitj'.     R.  and  B.  3  :  349.  > 

C.  551.  i 

Jolly.     The  jolly  learned  man  .  .  .  Cheek  and  jowl  all  in  laps  r 

with  fat  and  law,  Mirthful  as  mighty.     R.  and  B.  3  :  26.  ^ 

C.  424.  J 

Jonas.     (As  if  the  queasy  river  could  not  hold  Its  swallowed  ' 

Jonas,   but    discharged    the    meal.)      R.   and  B.    3 :  358. 

C.  555.  , 

Journey.    A  journey  is  an  enterprise  of  cost !    As  in  campaigns, 

we  fight  but  others  pay.     R.  and  B.  3  :  334.     C.  546. 
Journeying.     I   shall   go  journeying,  who  but  I,  pleasantly ! 

Sorrow   is  vain   and   despondency   sinful.      Flight   2  :  309. 

C.  278. 
Jove's.     While  Jove's  planet  rises  yonder,  silent  over  Africa. 

Home-T.  S.'i-.m.     C.  179. 
Joy.     every   joy   is   gain,    And   gain   is  gain,  however   small. 

Para.  1:91.     C.  36. 
Was  not  life  pressed  down,  running  o'er  with  joy.     Pippa 

1:353.     C.  139. 
give  a  loose  to  your   insulting  joy  ;   It  irks  me  more  thus 

stifled  than  expressed.     King  C.  1:403.     C.  159. 
With    insuppressive   joy   on    every  face  !      Colomhe   2  :  194. 

C.  236. 
So  should  the  frail  become  the  perfect,  rapt  From  glory  of 

pain  to  glory  of  joy.     R.  and  B.  3  :  396.     C.  569. 
And  my  pulses  leaped  for  joy  Of  the  golden  thought  without 

alloy.     Chris.-Eve  4  :  11.     C.  320. 
acquist.  Through  the  brief  minute's  fierce  annoy,  Of  God's 

eternity  of  joy.     £'as.-Z)a?/ 4  :  32.     C.  327. 
there  's  a  world  of  capability  For  joy,  spread  round  about  us, 

meant  for  us.     Cleon  4  :  120.     C.  360. 
life  's  inadequate  to  joy.  As  the  soul  sees  joy,  tempting  life  to 

take.     Cleon  4  :  120.     C.  360. 


JOY  — JUST  123 

Joy.     And  so  a  man  can  use  but  a  man's  joy  While  he  sees 

God's.     Cleon  4  :  120.     C.  3G0. 
every  day  my  sense  of  joy  Grows  more  acute,  my  soul  (inten- 
sified By  power  and  insight)  more  enlarged,  more   keen. 

Cleon  4  :  121.     C.  361. 
But  joy  ere  now  has  brought  hair  brown  again,  And  joy  will 

bring  the  cheek's  red  back.     In  a  B.  4^:  142.     C.  3G8. 
Poor  vaunt  of  life  indeed.  Were  man  but  formed  to  feed  On 

joy.     Ben  Ezra  4  :  186.     C.  383. 
Sober  is  genuine  joy.     St.  Mart.  5  :  353.     C.  815. 
Just  as  I  cannot,  till  myself  convinced,  Impart  conviction,  so, 

to  deal  forth  joy  Adroitly,  needs  must  I  know  joy  myself. 

Two  Camels  6  :  262.     C.  938. 
Joys.     The  obvious  petty  joys  that  spring  From  true  life.    Sor. 

1:228.     C.  88. 
Joyance.     by  joyance  you  inspire  joy,  —  learn  While  you  pro- 
fess to  teach,  and  teach,  although  Avowedly  a  learner.    Inn 

A.  5:272.     C.  785. 
Jubilee.     Jubilee  —  Short  shrift,  prompt  pardon  for  the  light 

offence.  And  no  rough  dealing  with  the  regular  crime.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  45.     C.  432. 
Judas.     Discovers  in  the   act  a  frightful  face — Judas,  made 

monstrous  by  much  solitude  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  232.     C.  507. 
Judges,     for   the    world 's   the  world.    And,  what   it  errs  in, 

Judges  rectify.     R.  and  B.  3  :  22.     C.  423. 
Judge.     Ever  judge  of  men  by  their  professions  !     Soul's  Tr. 

2  :  352.     C.  295. 
God  who  set  me  to  judge  thee,  meted  out  So  much  of  judg- 
ing faculty,  no  more.     R.  and  B.  3  :  362.     C.  556. 
Judge    no   man  by  the   solitai-y  work   Of  —  well,  .  .  .  The 

devil  in  him.     Inn  A.b:  287.     C.  791. 
Judgment.     Judgment,  that  dull  expedient  we  are  fain,  .  .  . 

to  adopt  betimes.     Sor.  1:2m.     C.  80. 
Judgment  drops  her  damning  plummet.      Chris.-Eve  4  :  15. 

C.  321. 
Judgment-bar.     Not  so  !     Expect  nor  question  nor  reply  At 

what  we  figure  as  God's  judgment-bar  !     R,  and  B.  3  :  364. 

C.  557. 
Juggle.     There's  some  vile  juggle  with  my  reason  here.     Pau, 

1:17.     C.  8. 
June.     June 's   twice   June   since   she   breathed   it   with  me  ? 

Flower's  2:9.     C.  166. 
A   broiling   blasting   June,  —  was   never   its   like,  men  say. 

Ned  B.  6  :  143.     C.  887. 
Jurists.     Till  last  come  human  jurists — solidify  Fluid  result, 

—  what 's  fixable  lies  forged.     R.  and  B.  3  :  182.     C.  487. 
Just.     Hereafter,  God  grant  mercy  !     Man  be  just  Xor  let  tlie 

felon  boast  he  went  scot-free  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  360.     C.  ooo. 


124  JUST— KEY 

Just.     You  that  are  just  and  generous  beside,  Make  it  your  own 

case  !     In  a  B.A:  133.     C.  364. 
Justice  says  :  Be  just  to  fact,  or  blaming  or  approving:  Bnt  — 

generous  ?    No,  nor  loving  !    Epil.  Bean-St.  G  :  282.    C.  946. 
Justice.     Justice,  no  less,  God's  justice  and  no  more.     Druses 

2  :  142.     C.  215. 

Infinite   mercy,   but,   I  wis,  As   infinite  a  justice  too.     Her. 

Trag.  2  :  313.     C.  280. 
Well  then,  to  perish  for  a  single  fault,  Let  that  be  simple 

justice  !     Luria  2  :  366.     C.  301. 
shall  I  wait  a  day  ere  I  decide  On  doing  or  not  doing  justice 

here  ?     R.  and  5.  3  :  8.     C.  417. 
Robbed   and  starved  and  frozen  too,  We  will  have  justice, 

justice  if  there  be  !     R.  and  JB.  3  :  44.     C.  431. 
Thus   Was   justice  ever   ridiculed   in   Rome :    Such   be   the 

double  verdicts  favored  here.     R.  and  B.  3  :  49.     C.  433. 
see  truth  yet  triumphant,  justice  yet  A  victor  in  the  battle  of 

this  world  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  187.     C.  489. 
let  him  ponder  long  in  this  bad  world  Ere  do  the  simplest  act 

of  justice.     R.  and  B.  3  :  302.     C.  534. 
Though  justice   fain  would  jog   reluctant  arm.     R.   and  B. 

3  :  311.     C.  537. 

Inconscious  agents  they,  the  silly-sooth,  Of  heaven's  retribu- 
tive justice  on  the  strong.     R.  and  B.  3  :  431.     C.  583. 
disenvolved  From  the  mere   outside  anguish  and  contempt, 

Slowlv  a  justice  centred  in  a  doom  Reveals  itself.     Ari.  A. 

5  :  100.     C.  629. 
Justice  is  justice,  and  the  magistrate  Bears  not  the  sword  in 

vain.     Who  sins  must  die.     Cenciaja  5  :  373.     C.  823. 
our  long  dream  that  justice  bears  no  sword.  Or  else  forgets 

whereto  its  sharpness  serves  !     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  296.     C.  952. 
Justifiable.     A  course  we  took  for  life  and  honor's  sake,  Very 

strange,  very  justifiable.     R.  and  B.  3  :93.     C.  451. 
That  v/hich  we  do,  persuaded  of  good  cause  For  what  we  do, 

hold  justifiable  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  288.     C.  529. 
Justify.     Why  then  could  you,  who  stopped  short,  not  go  on 

One  poor  step  more,   and  justify  the  means.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  230.     C.  506. 
Justinian's.   Justinian's  Pandects  only  make  precise  What  sim- 

I)ly  sparkled  in  men's  eyes  before.    R.  and  B.  3  :  182.  C.  487. 


Kant.     Be  Kant  crowned  king  o'  the  castle  in  the  air  !     Prince 

H.  4  :  356.     C.  691. 
Key.     I  was  full  of  bliss,  who  lived  With  Plato  and  who  had 

the  key  to  life.     Pau.  1 :  11.     C.  6. 


\ 


KILLED  — KXOCK  125 

Elilled.     If  killed,  what  matter  how  ?  —  By  stick  or  stone,  by 

sword  or  dagger.     R.  and  B.  3  :305.     C.  535. 
Kindlier,     the  kindlier  mode  Was  —  drub  not  stab,  ribroast  not 

scarify!     Ari.  A.ti:\Al.     C.  645. 
King.     A  king  lived  long  ago.     Pippa  1  :  35G.     C.  140. 

this  perpetual    yearning  to  exceed,  to  subdue,  to   be    better 

than,  and  a  king  over,  one's  fellows.      SouVs   Tr.  2 :  350. 

C.  295. 

Kiss.     I   give   him  for  reward   a   uectared   kiss.      ii.  and  B. 

3:332.     C.  545. 

a  kiss  Sagely  and  sisterly  administered.     R.  and  B.  3 :  335. 

C.  546. 
The  kiss  turns  bite.  The  dove's  note  changes  to  the  crow's  cry. 

^.  aHf/£.  3:389.     C.  567. 
Whose  neck   writhes,  cords  itself  against   your  kiss.  Whose 
haud    you  wring  stark,  rigid   with   despair !      R.  and    B. 
3  :  426.     C.  581. 
Down  here,  —  do  I  make  too  bold  ?  .  .  .  —  one  fool's  small 

kiss  !     Sol.  and  B.  6  :  202.     C.  914. 
If,  despite  this  lie,  he  strips  The  mask  from  my  soul  with  a 

kiss  —  I  crawl  His  slave.     Adam  6  : 207.     C.  916. 
Brightest  truth,  purest  trust  in  the  universe  —  all  were  for  me 

In  the  kiss  of  one  girl.     Sum.  Bon.  6  :  393  ;  7  :  11.     C.  988. 
some  explosive  kiss   Of  love  through  lips.     Bea.  Sig.  6  :  412  ; 

7:58.     C.  996. 
Ere  I  tell,  ere  thou  speak.  Kiss  my  cheek,  wish  me  well !    Saul 

2:47.     C.  179. 
Kiss  me  as  if  You  were  not  sure,  .  .  .  How  my  face,  your 
flower,    had    pursed    Its    petals    up.        Gondola     2  :  264. 
C.  262. 
likes  to  kiss  his  neighbor's  wife,  And  beat  his  own.     Ari.  A. 
5:121.     C.  637. 
Kisses.     So,  truce  to  the  protesting.  So,  muffled  be  the  kisses  ! 
St.  Mart.  5  :  353.     C.  815. 
a  shovelful  Of  fertilizing  kisses  ?     Plot-C.  6  :  266.     C.  940. 
Kissed,     kissed  My  soul  out  in  a  burning  mist.     Confess.  2  :  16. 
C.  169. 
She  kissed  off  the  wax,  And  piit  what  paper  was  not  kissed 
away,  In  her  bosom  to  go  burn.     R.  and  B.  3  :  202.     C.  494. 
Knew.     Knew  himself  the  mighty  man  he  was  —  such  know- 
ledge all  his  guerdon.     Pittro  6  :179.     C.  905. 
Knife.      cold  pale   lightning   of  a  knife.     R.   and   B.  3:411. 

C.  575. 
Knight.     Have  we   misjudged   here,  ovei'-armed    our   knight, 
Given  gold  and  silk   where  plain  hard  steel  serves  best  — 
R.  and  B.  3  :  388.     C.  566. 
Knock,     a  knock  —  Sharp,  solitary,  cold,  authoritative.     Ari. 
A.  5:126.     C.  639. 


126  KNOCKING-UNDER— KNOWLEDGE 

Knocking-iinder.     Don't  talk  to  me  of  kiiocking-imcler  !  man 

And    male  must  eucl  what   petticoats  began  !     2'wo  Poets 

G  :  109.     C.  871. 
Kuottiness.     Never  was  such  a  tangled  knottiness,  But  thus 

authority  cuts  the   Gordiau   through,      it.    and   B.   3 :  59. 

C.  437. 
KuoAw.     You,  if  a  man  may,  dare  aspire  to  know.   Para.  1  :  33. 

C.  15. 
Know,  not  for  knowing's  sake.  But  to  become  a  star  to  men 

forever.     Para.  1  :  39.     C.  17. 
Know,  for  the  gain  it  gets,  the  praise  it  brings,  the  wonder  it 

inspires,  the  love  it  breeds.     Para.  1  :  39.     C.  17. 
to  KNOW,  Rather  consists  in  opening  out  a  way  .  .  .  Than  in 

effecting  entry.     Para.  1  :43.     C.  18. 
I   am   he    that  aspired   to   know:   and  thou?     Para.  1:54. 

C.  23. 
This  man  decided  not  to  Live  but  Know.     Gram.  Fun.  2  :  313. 

C.  280. 
there  is  nothing  new  possible   to   be   revealed   to  us  in   the 

moral  world  ;  we  know  all  we  shall  ever  know.     Soul's  Tr. 

2:354.     C.  296. 
It  was  not  given  Pompilia  to  know  much.  Speak  much,  to  write 

a  book,  to  move  mankind.     P.  and  B.  3  :379.     C.  5G2. 
"  Saint  Somebody-or-other  raised  the  dead  :  "  Did  he  ?     How 

do   you   come    to   know   as   much?      R.  and   B.    3:423. 

C.  580. 
to  know  is  something,  and  to  prove  How  all  this  beauty  might 

be  enjoyed,  is  more.     Clean  4  :  121.     C.  3G0. 
seeing,   know.  And,  knowing,  can   dispense   with   voice   and 

vanity  Of  speech.     FiA'«e  4:427.     C.  727. 
Trust  me,  I  know  the  world,  and  know  myself,  And  know 

where    duty  takes    me  —  in  good  time  !     Red  Cott.  5 :  33. 

C.  749. 
I  must  know  All  to  be  known  at  any  halting-stage  Of  my  soul's 

progress.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  338.     C.  9G9. 
I   know   there   shall    dawn   a    day.      Rev.    6  :  434  ;   7  :  102. 

C.  1005. 
Knows.     I  —  About   to   figure   presently   .    .    .   am    the   one 

Who   knows    precisely  least  about  it  ?      King    V.   1  :  372. 

C.  146. 
Knowledge.     When  yet  this  wolfish  hunger  after  knowledge 

Set   not   remorselessly   love's   claims  aside.      Para.    1:49. 

C.  20. 
Never   fear  but   there 's  provision  Of   the  devil's  to  quench 

knowledge  Lest  we  walk  the  earth  in  rapture  !     Crist.  2  :  19. 

C.  170. 
knowledge  that  broke  through  a  heart  to  life.     Luria  2  :  383. 

C.  307. 


KNOWLEDGE  — LADDER-TOP  127 

Knowledge.     I  can  profit  by  late  found  But  precious  know- 
ledge.    Eas.-Day  4  :  52.     C.  334. 
In   heaven  I  yearn  for  knowledge,  account  all  else  inanity. 

Sol.  and  B.  6  :  202.      C.  914. 
—  Knowledge,  the    golden  ?  —  lacquered  ignorance  !      Pillar 

6:268.     C.  940. 
knowledge  means  Ever-renewed   assurance   by   defeat   That 

victory  is  somehow  still  to  reach.     Pillar  6  :  268.     C.  940. 
Wholly  distrust  thj^  knowledge,  then,  and  trust  As  wholly  love 

allied  to  ignorance  !     Pillar  6  :  269.     C.  941. 
knowledge  doubt  Even  wherein  it  seems  demonstrable  !    Pillar 

6 : 269.     C.  941. 
Were  knowledge  all  thy  faculty,  then  God  Must  be  ignored  : 

love  gauis  him  by  first  leap.     Pillar  6  :  270.     C.  941. 
First  give  us  knowledge,  then  appoint  its  use  !     Chris.  Sm. 

6  :  317.     C.  961. 
'Twixt      ignorance     and      ignorance     enisled,  —  Knowledge. 

Fr.i^u.  6:336.     C.  968. 
teach  that  knowledge  helps  —  not  ignorance  —  The  healing  of 

the  nations.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  341.     C.  970. 
No,  Man's    the    prerogative  —  knowledge    once  gained  —  To 

ignore, — fi.nd   new  knowledge  to  press  for.     Fust  6:381. 

C.  985. 
KiiO"wrn.      From  the  known  to  the  unknown  here,   Heaven's 

"Shall   be,"   from  Earth's   "Has   been"?      Rev.  6:439; 

7 : 111.     C.  1006. 
Known  yet  ignored,  nor  divined  nor  unguessed,  Such  is  Man's 

law  of  life.     Apol.  and  F.  6  :  293.     C.  951. 
Knox.     As  if  you  had   carried  sour  John  Knox  To  the  play- 
house at  Paris.     Sib.  Schaf.  2  :  11.     C.  167. 


Labor.     When  we  mind  labor,  then  only,  we  're  too  old.   Flight 

2  :  309.     C.  278. 
Let  labor  win  leisure  At  last  to  bid  truth  do  all  duty  assigned, 

Not  pause  at  the  noble  but  pass  to  the  hind  !    Fust  6  :  378. 

C.  984. 
Man's  work  is  to  labor  and  leaven  —  As  best  he  may  —  earth 

here  with  heaven.     Pacch.  5  :  327.     C.  805. 
Lace,     neighbors  turned  heads  wistfully  at  church.  Sighed  at 

the  load  of   lace  that   came    to  pray.     R.  and   B.    3 :108. 

C.  457, 
plying  brisk  Bobbins  that  bob  you  ladies  out  such  lace  !     Red 

Cott.  5:4.     C.  737. 
Ladder-top.     o  'erstep  no  least  one  of  the  rows  That  lead  man 

from  the  bottom  ...  to  life's  last  ladder-top.     Chris.  Sm. 

6  :  317.     C.  961. 


128  LADES  — LASAGNE 

Lades.    Lades  Liin  and  hies  to  the  old  lurking-place.   R.  and  B. 

3  :  372.     C.  5(30. 
Lady.      A  lady,  young,  tall,  beautiful,  strange  and    sad.      R. 

and  B.  3  :  198.     C.  493. 
Lady-love.    There  were  the  lady-love  predestinate  !   R.  and  B. 

3  :  76.     C.  444. 
Laity.     Maladroit  uncomplaisant  laity.  Defective  in  behavior  to 

a  priest.     R.  and  B.  3  :  184.     C.  487. 
Lamp.     I  press  God's  lamp  Close  to  my  breast  ;  its  splendor, 

soon  or  late.  Will  pierce  the  gloom.     Pura.  1 :  122.     C.  48. 
man's  lamp  I'  the  magistrate's  grasp  full-flare,  no  rushlight- 
end     Sputtering   'twixt    thumb   and   finger.      R.    and   B. 

3  :  377.     C.  oC2. 
Lamp  us,  pray.  Thou  the  Enlightener  !   Joch.  6  :  212.    C.  918. 
Land.     The   land   dwarfed   to  one   likeness  of  the  land,  Life 

cramped  corpse-fashion.     R.  and  B.  3  :  31.     C.  426. 
a  land  where  life  was  great  And  sense  went  free  and  beauty 

lay  profuse.     R.  and  B.  3  :  394.     C.  568. 
Lands.    Who  had  trod  many  lands,  known  many  deeds,  Probed 

many  hearts,   beginning  with  his   own.     R,    and  B.   3:8. 

C.  417. 
Language.     Language   that  goes,  goes,  easy  as  a  glove,  O'er 

good  and  evil,  smoothens  both  to  one.     R.  and  B.  3  :  27. 

C.  425. 
Oh,  language  fails,  —  Shrinks  from  depicturing  his  turpitude! 

R.  and  B.  3  :  296.     C.  531. 
once  more  adjust  Real  vision  to  right  language.     Chris.  Sm. 

6  :  315.     C.  960. 
Larches,     fast  Larches,  scattered  through  pine-tree  solitudes, 

Brightened.     Sor.  1 -.216.     C.  83. 
Large.     Viewed  in  the  large,  those  little  joys  and  griefs  Ranged 

duly  all  a-row  at  last.     Bean-St.  6  :  272.     C.  942. 
Largeness.     Mere   largeness   in   a  life  is   something,  sure, — 

Enough  to  care  about  and  struggle  for.     Colomhe  2:202. 

C.  239. 
Largess.     The  customary  largess,  dole  dealt  out  To,  what  we 

call  our  "  poor  dear  shamefaced  ones."     R.  and  B.  3  :  108. 

C.  457. 
Lark.     The  lark,  God's  poet.     Sor.  1 :  326.     C.  127. 

Oh    lark,    be    day's    apostle    To   mavis,    merle   and  throstle. 

Pippa\:m&.     C.  144. 
As  lark  emballed  by  its  own  crystal  song.  Or  rose  enmisted  by 

that  scent  it  makes  !     Ari.  A.5:  149.     C.  648. 
Day  's  the  song-time  for  the  lark.     Jock.  6  :  226.     C.  924. 
Lark's.     Lovely  lark's  tirra-lirra,  lad's  delight !   ^ri.  ^.5:135. 

C.  642. 
Lasagne,     lasagne  so  tempting  to  swallow  In  slippery  ropes. 

Englishm.  2  :  259.     C.  260. 


LAST  — LAW  129 

Last.     But  a  last  leaf  — fear  to  touch!    By  Fire. 2:  &o.    C.  187. 
if  it  might  but  last !  Always,  my  life-long,  thus  to  journey 
still  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  218.     C.  501. 
Late.     Late  they  arrived,  too  late,  egregious  Sir,  Those  same 

justificative  points,     it.  and  B.  3  :  4G3.     C.  596. 
Latin,     in  a  Latin  cramp  enough  When  the  law  had  her  elo- 
quence to  launch.     R.  and  Z^.  3  : 4.     C.  416. 
Lord,  they  'd  have  taught  me  Latin  in  pure  waste  !   Fra  Lippo 

4  :  76.     C.  343. 

Right  text,  ringing  rhyme,  and   ripe   Latin  for   me  !      Fust 
6  :  373.     C.  982. 
Laud.     Poor  gray  old  little  Laud  May  dream  his  dream  out, 
of  a  perfect  Church,  In  some  blind  corner.     Straf.  1  :  191. 
C.  74. 
Lauded,     what  erst  Heaven-high  he  lauded,  lies  hell-low,  ac- 
cursed !     Geo.  B.  D.Q:  324.     C.  963. 
Laugh,    a  human  lucid  laugh  All  trust,  no  fear.   /n?i  .4 .  5  :  285. 
C.  790. 
the  soul  Bursts  forth  in  a  clear  laugh  that  lengthens  on.     Inn 

^.5:290.     C.  792. 
Lo,  I  've   laughed  out  my  laugh  on  this  mirthday  !     Pacch, 

5  :  332.     C.  807. 

It  is  but  to  keep  the  nerves  at  strain,  To  dry  one's  eyes  and 

laugh  at  a  fall.     Life  in  L.  2  :  81.     C.  192. 
I  was  sure,  if  I  tried,  I  could  make  you  laugh  spite  of  Sci- 

rocco.     Englishm.  2  :  257.     C.  260. 
(and  truly  divers  scenes  .  .  .  tickle  rib  And  tease  eye  till  the 

tears  come,  so  we  laugh.     R.  and  B.  3  :  173.     C.  483. 
Why  do  I  laugh?     Why,  in  the  very  gripe  O'  the  jaws  of 

death's  gigantic  skull  —     R.  and  B.  3  :  426.     C.  581. 

Laugh  at  Hell  who  list,  I  can't  !     God 's  no  fable  either.    Did 

this  boy's  eye  wink  once  ?     Clive  6  :  160.     C.  895. 

Laughs.     A-bubble  in  the  larynx  while  he  laughs,  As  he  had 

fritters  deep  down  frying  there.     R.  and  B.  3  :  26.    C.  425. 

Laughed.     Heartily  laughed  the  world  in  his  fool's-face.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  77.     C.  444. 
Laughing-stock,     thus  made  a  laughing-stock  abroad,  A  pro- 
verb  for  the  market-place   at  home.     R.   and   B.   3 :  47. 
C.  432. 
Laughter.     As  good  as  laugh,  what  in  a  judge  we  style  Laughter 
—  no  levity,  nothing  indecorous,  lords  !     R.  and  B.  3 :  189. 
C.  489. 
Lavish,     no    "strange  yearning  .  .  .  most  to  lavish  Where 

there  's  chance  of  least  returning."     Crist.  2  :  18.    C.  169. 
Law.     For  why  deal  simply  with  divining-rod,  .  .  .  And  ignore 
law,  the  recognized  machine.     A',  and  B.  3  :  25.     C.  424. 
whereas  law  and  gospel  held  their  peace.  What  wonder  if  the 
sticks  and  stones  cried  out  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  64.     C.  439. 


130  LAAV 

La^v.     law,  distasteful  to  who  calls  in  law  When  honor  is  be- 
forehand and  would  serve.     E.  and  B.  3  :G6.     C.  440. 
Law,  alien  to  the  actor  whose  warm  blood  Asks  heat  from 

law  whose  veins  run   lukewarm  milk.     R.    and  B.   3  :  G7. 

C.  440. 
Call  in  law  when  a  neighbor  breaks  your  fence,  Cribs  from 

vour  field,  tampers  with  rent  or  lease.     R.  and  B.  3  :  67. 

C.  440. 
When  law  addressed  herself  to  set  wrong  right,  And  proved 

so  slow  in  taking  the  first  step.     R.  and  B.  3  :  100.    C.  450. 
Naught  left  you  but  a  low  appeal  to  law,  "  Coward  "  tied  to 

your  tail  for  compliment !     R.  and  B.  3  :  132.     C.  4G7. 
Law  renovates  even  Lazarus.     R.  and  B.  3  :  169.     C.  481. 
To  every  one  o'  my  grievances  law  gave  Redress,  could  pur- 
blind eye  but  see  the  point.     R.  and  B.  3  :  169.     C.  481. 
I  began  life  by  hanging  to  the  law.  To  the  law  it  is  I  hang  till 

life  shall  end.     R.  and  B.  3: 181.     C.  486. 
Better  late  than  never,  law  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  192.     C.  490. 
But  you   were   law   and   gospel,  —  would   one   please   Stand 

back,  allow  your  faculty  elbow-room  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  228. 

C.  505. 
Unluckily,  law  quite  absorbs  a  man,  Or  else  I  think  I  too  had 

poetized.     R.  and  B.  3  :  282.     C.  526. 
"  Law   is   the   pork   substratum  of   the   fry.  Goose-foot  and 

cock's-comb  are  Latinity."     R.  and  B.  3  :  282.     C.  526. 
Ah,  bnt  with  law  ne'er  hope  To  level  the  fellow,  —  don't  I 

know  his  trick  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  284.     C.  527. 
All  that  was  long  ago  declared  as  law  By  the  natural  revela- 
tion, stands  confirmed.     R.  and  B.  3  :  292.     C.  530. 
Law  refused   loan  of   a  finger-tip  To  unravel,   readjust   the 

hopeless  twine.     R.  and  B.  3  :  296.     C.  532. 
My  lords,  my  lords,  the  inconsiderate  step  Was  —  we  referred 

ourselves  to  law  at  all !     R.  and  B.  3  :  297.     C.  532. 
Law  in  a  man  takes  the  whole  liberty  :  The  muse  is  fettered  : 

just  as  Ovid  found  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  300.     C.  533. 
Ere  thou  hast  learned  law,  will  be  much  to  do.  As  said  the 

gaby  while  he  shod  the  goose.     R.  and  B.  3  :  302.    C.  534. 
Law  hangs  her  title  forth.  To  show  she  entertains  you.     R. 

and  B.  3 -.354:.     C.  553. 
Law  takes  him  by  surprise  at  last,  Catches  the  foul  thing  on 

its  carrion-prey.     R.  and  B.  3 :  367.     C.  558. 
'T  is  pity  that    old   harsh    Law  somehow  limps.  Lingers  on 

earth,  although   Law's   day   be   done.     R.  and  B.  3 :  412. 

C.  576. 
Does  Law  permit  a  taste  of  Gospel-grace  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  412. 

C.  576. 
No  adequate  machinery  in  law  ?     No  power  of  life  and  death 

i'  the  learned  tongue  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  474.     C.  600. 


LAW  — LEARN  131 

Law.    Law  leers  with  license,  folly  wise-like  frowns.     Ari.  A. 
5  :  162.     C.  653. 
Nothing  that  lives,  but  Thy  mark  Gives  law  to  —  life's  light. 

Fust  6 -.380.     C.  985. 
In  the  matter  of  law  yovi  were  nowise  wronged,  But  alas  for 
the  lucre  !     Ponte  ^.  6  :407  ;  7  :46.     C.  994. 
Law-phrase.     Wheezes  out   law-phrase,  whiffles  Latin   forth. 

R.  and  B.  S -.26.     C.  425. 
Law's.     Law's  speech  beside  law's   thought  ?     That  were  too 
stunning,  too  immense  an  odds.     R.  and  B.  3  :  26.     C.  424. 
With  law's  award,  budge  !     Back  into  your  place  !    R.  and  B. 
3  :  170.     C.  482. 
Laws.     Ask  thy  lone  soul  what  laws  are  plain  to  thee,  —  Thee 
and  no  other,  —  stand  or  fall  by  them  !     That  is  the  part 
for  thee  :  regard  all  else  For  what  it  may  be  —  Time's  illu- 
sion.    Ca?ne;-Z).  6:259.     C.  937. 
Lawless,     call   them   "lawless"   means,  men  take   To  extri- 
cate themselves  through  mother-wit.      R.   and  B.  3  :  345. 
C.  550. 
Lawyer.      The  Lawyer  —  his  lies   are   conventional.      Pacch. 
5  :  321.     C.  803. 
A   sort  of   a  lawyer,  just  the  man  to  betray  our  sort  —  the 

scamp  !     Mar.  Rel.  6  :  120.     C.  870. 
A   lawyer  wins  repute  —  Having   to  toil  and  moil,   though. 
Doctor  6  :  181.     C.  906. 
Lawyers.     Look   at   my   lawyers,  lacked   they  grace  of   law, 

Latin  or  logic  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  442.     C.  588. 
Leaders.     I   have  known  i^our-and-twenty  leaders  of  revolts. 

Soul's  Tr.  2 -.Sod.     C.  298. 
Leaf.     Each  leaf  like  a  hand  opened  wide  to  the  world.     /.  Lee 
4:155.     C.  373. 
How    the    greenest    leaf  turns    serest.      St.   Mart.   5:351. 
C.  814. 
Leap.     Great  undisguised  leap  over  post  and  pale  Right  into  the 
raid-cirque,  free  fighting-place.     R.  and  B.  3  :381.    C.  563. 
Lear.     O  Lear,  That  a  reason  out  of  nature  must  turn  them 

soft,  seems  clear  !     Hal.  and  Hob  6  :  130.     C.  880. 
Learn.     Just  when  I  seemed  about  to  learn  !     Two  in  C.  2  :  72. 
C.  189. 
My  life  stopped  with  the  play-time  ;  I  will  learn,  If  I  begin 

to  live  again.     R.  and  B.  3  :217.     C.  501. 
To   learn   not   only   by   a   comet's  rush    But   a  rose's  birth. 

R.  and  B.  3 : 235.     C.  508. 
we  live   to  learn,  And  try  to  learn  by  reading  story-books. 

Red  Cott.  5:8.     C.  739. 
'T  is  there  we  learn,  —  there  prove  Our  parts  upon  the  stuff 

we  needs  must  spoil.     Joch.  6  :  232.     C.  927. 
lives  —  So  needs  must  learn.     Chris.  Sm.  6  :313.     C.  959. 


132  LEARNED  —  LESS 

Learned.     Things  learned  on  earth,  we  shall  practise  in  heaven. 

Old  Pict.  2 -AO.     cm. 
'Unwise  I  learned."    That's  two.    /ocA.  6:214.     C.  919. 
Learned  for  the  nonce  as  Gibbon,  witty  as  wit's  self  Voltaire. 

La  S.  6  :  71.     C.  858. 
The   learned    eye   is  still   the  loving  one  !     Red    Cott.  5 : 3. 

C.  737. 
Learnedest.     gnawed   mv  style  and    langhed    my  learnedest. 

Ari.  A.  5:110.     C.  635. 
Learning.     Domes  where  dwells    Learning,  seats  of   Science, 

bower  and  hall    Which   house  Philosophy.     Fijine  4  :  432. 

C.  729. 
'T  was  learning  all  in  vain  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  440.     C.  587. 
Far  alike  from  thriftless  learning  And  ignorance's  undiscern- 

ing.     Chris.-Eve  4  :  10.     C.  319. 
Learning's,    knew  better  than  turn  straight  Learning's  full  flare 

on  weak-eyed  ignorance.     Dev.  6  :  429  ;  7  :  90.     C.  1003. 
Learningly.     Man  learninglv  lives:  till  death  helps  him  —  no 

lore  !     Apol.  and  F.  6  :  294.     C.  951. 
Leave.     Me   do   you   leave   aghast    With   the   memories   We 

amassed  ?     Lovers'  Q.  2  :30.     C.  173. 
Leaves,     uplift  by  wings  Of  passion,  here  and  now,  it  leaves  the 

earth.  Loses  itself  above,  where  bliss  has  birth.     Fr.  Fu. 

6:338.     C.  9G8. 
Leech,     a  leech  renowned  World-wide,  confessed  the  lord  of 

surgery.     Family  G -.2^1 .     C.  932. 
Lees.     There  let  his  life  skim  off  its  last  of  lees  Nor  keep  this 

dubious  color.     R.  and  B.  3  :99.     C.  453. 
Left.     'T  is  only   I  am  left.      Heaven  will  make  strong  The 

hand  now  as  the  heart.     Then  let  both  die !     Straf.  1  :  182. 

C.  70. 
What  would  be  left,  his  life's  illusion  fled,  —  What  hope  or 

trust  in  the  forlorn  wide  world  ?     Luria  2  :  394.     C.  312. 
left  o'  the  very  ledge  of  things,  I  seem  to  see  him  catch  con- 
vulsively One  by  one  at  all  honest  forms  of  life.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  231.     C.  507. 
Shook  heads  and  waited  for  a  miracle.  Or  went  their  way,  left 

Virtue  to  her  fate.     R.  and  B.  3  :  342.     C.  549. 
Legs.     Legs,  arms,  ribs,  all  of   him  looked  like  a  toast  In  a 

tumbler  of  port-wine  soaken.     Don.   6  :  198.     C.  913. 
Leisure.     When  a  man  's  busy,  why,  leisure    Strikes    him  as 

wonderful  pleasure.     Glove  2  :  247.     C.  256. 
Leonor.      My    perfect    wife,   my    Leonor.       By    Fire  2 :  62. 

C.  186. 
Leprosy.     The  ulcerous  barky  scurf  of  leprosy  W^hich  finds  — 

a  man,  and  leaves  —     Pa}-a.  1  :  88.     C.  36. 
Less.     I  cannot  say  less  ;  more  I  will  not  say.     Leave  it  to  God 

to  cover  and  undo  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  252.     C.  515. 


LESSER  — LICK  133 

Lesser,     the  lesser  has  its  use,  Which,  when  it  apes  the  greater, 

is  foregone.     Luria  2  :401.     C.  314. 
Lesson.     Go,  little  girl  with  the  jwor  coarse  hand  !     I  have  my 
lesson,  shall  understand.     J.  Lee  4  :  163.     C.  376. 
life's  lesson,  hate  of  evil,  love  of  good.      La  S.  6  :64.     C.  853. 
"  Take   what   is,   trust  what   may  be  ! "     That 's  Life's  true 

lesson,  — eh?     Prol.  Fer.  6  :  24:0.     C.  929. 
I  've  had  my  small  adventure  lesson  me  Over  the  knuckles  ! 
Inn  A.  5: 255.     C.  778. 
Letter.      Double   or    quits  !      The    letter   goes !      Or  stays  ? 

Prince  H.  4  :  379.     C.  700. 
Letters.     Your    letters    were   the   movingest !      Straf.   1 :  140. 
C.  54. 
certain  missives,  letters  of   a  sort,  Flighty  and  feeble.      R. 
and  B.  3:58.     C.  437. 
Letters'.     Last  come  the  letters'  bundled  beastliness.     R.  and 

B.  3 : 58.     C.  437. 

Level.     For  all  who  love  the  level,  corn  and  wine.  Much  cattle 

and  the  many-folded  fleece.     R.  and  B.  3  :  30.     C.  426. 
Levity.     'T  is  safe  to  censure  levity  in  youth.  Tax  womanhood 
with  indiscretion,  sure  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  346.     C.  550. 
the  frank  Concession  to  mere  mortal  levity,  Satyric  pittance 

tossed  our  beggar-world  !     Ari.  A.  5  :  122.     C.  637. 
Touched  with  aught  But  earnestness,  the  levity  wei-e  fraught 
With  ruin  to  guile's  film-work.     Geo.  B.  D.6:  325.    C.  963. 
Liars.     God  bless  us  liars,  where  's  one  touch  of  truth  In  what 
we  tell  the  world,  or  world  tells  us,  Of  how  we  love  each 
other  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  434.     C.  585. 
Liberty.     But  little  do  or  can  the  best  of  us  :  That  little  is 
achieved  through  Liberty.      Whtj  6  :  388.     C.  948. 
I  was  vowed  to  liberty,  Men  were  to  be  as  gods  and  earth  as 

heaven.     Pau.  1:11.     C.  6. 
Curse  Whoever  loves,  above  his  liberty,  House,  land  or  life  ! 

Soul's  Tr.  2  :  343.     C.  292. 
that  way,  liberty  at  least,  Sure  of  so  much  by  law's  own  show- 
ing.    R.  and  B.  3  :  170.     C.  482. 
To  the  wood  then,  to  the  wild  :  free  life,  full  liberty  !     Fifine 
4:385.     C.  703. 
License,     have  we  back  The  old  Pagan  license  ?     R.  and  B. 

3  :  339.     C.  548. 
Licensed.     What  may  be  licensed  in    the  Autumn  dry  And 
ripe,  the  latter  harvest-tide  of  man  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  291. 

C.  530. 

Lichens.  How  the  minute  gray  lichens,  plate  o'er  plate.  Have 
softened  down  the  crisp-cut  name  and  date  !  Earth's  Ini. 
2  :  20.     C.  170. 

Lick,  the  man  would  lick  your  shoe  If  you  and  certain  efficacious 
friends  Managed  him  warily.     R,  and  B.  3  :  199.     C.  493. 


134  LIE 

Lie.     The  whole  thing  is  a  lie,  a  hateful  lie.     King  C.  1  :  407. 
C.  IGO. 
It  is  a  lie  —  their  Priests,  their  Pope,  Their  Saints.     Confess. 

2  :  15.     C.  169. 

Fine  as  a  skein  of  the  casuist  Escobar's  Worked  on  the  bone 

of  a  lie.     Master  H.  2  :  94.     C.  196. 
At  prick  and  summons  of  the  primal  curse  Which  bids  man 

love  as  well  as  make  a  lie.     li.  and  B.  3  :15.     C.  420. 
Here  was  all  lie,  no  touch  of  truth  at  all.     li.  and  B.     3  :  45. 

C.  432. 
"  There  's  a  lie  at  base  of  all."     R.  and  B.  3  :  113.     C.  459. 
Enormous  lie   hatched   for   mere  malice'  sake.      R.  and  B. 

3  :  120.     C.  461. 

must  I  burn  mv  lips  With  the  blister  of  the  lie  ?     R.  and  B. 

3    157.     C.  476. 
I  tired  of  the  same  long  black  teasing  lie  Obtruded  thus  at 

every  turn.     R.  atid  B.  3  :  204.     C.  495. 
Hating  lies,  let  not  her  believe  a  lie  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  212. 

C.  499. 
but    how    splendidly    Mirthful,   how    ludicrous    a    lie    was 

launched  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  222.     C.  503. 
Had  the  liar's  lie  been  true  one  pin-point  speck.     R.  and  B. 

3:229.     C.  506. 
Even  when  I  found  that  such  as  are  untrue  Could  only  take 

the  truth  in  through  a  lie  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  264.     C.  519. 
friends,  a   heap,  Lovers,  no  lack  —  a   husband  in  due  time, 

And   every   one    of   them   alike   a   lie !     In   a   B.  4l:  134. 

C.  365. 
there  's  a  real  love  of  a  lie.  Liars  find  ready-made  for  lies 

they  make.     Sludge  4  :  238.     C.  404. 
Don't  let  truth's  lump  rot  stagnant  for  the  lack  Of  a  timely 

helpful  lie  to  leaven  it  !     Sludge  4  :  252.     C.  410. 
all  true,  except  The  one  weak  place  that 's  stanchioned  by  a 

lie!     Prmce/f.  4:361.     C.  693. 
Endure  no  lie* which  needs  your  heart  And  hand  to  push  it 

out  of  mankind's  path.     Prince  H.  4  :  372.     C.  698. 
at  least  the  lie  's  exempt  From  slur,  ...  of  aiming  to  debase 

Rather  than  elevate.     Fijine  4  :  415.     C.  720. 
Then   do   we  understand  the   value  of  a  lie.     Fijine  4  :  439. 

C.  733. 
Counting  his  sham  beads  threaded  on  a  lie.     Red  Colt.  5  :  30. 

C.  747. 
Alack,  That  well-worn  lie  is  obsolete  !      Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  326. 

C.  964. 
Mv  aim  should  be  to  loathe,  like  Peleus'  son,  A  lie  as  Hell's 

Gate.     Dei:  6  :  431  ;  7  :  93.     C  1003. 
Speaks  or  keeps  silence  as  himself  sees  fit.  Without  the  least 

incumbency  to  lie.     R.  and  B.  3  :  364.     C.  557. 


LIE  — LIFE  135 

Lie.     Why  repine  ?     What  does  the  world,  told  truth,  but  lie 

the  more  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  371.     C.  559. 
ay,  to  the  end,  Keep  up  the  jest,  lie  on,  lie  ever,  lie  I'  the 

latest  gasp  of  me  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  413.     C.  576. 
So,  end  your  lecture.   Let  who  lied  be  left  lie  !      Flute-M. 

6 : 424  ;  7 : 81.     C.  1001. 
Lies,     outward  crust  Of  lies  which  wrap,  as  tetter,  morphew, 

furfair  Wrap  the  sound  flesh  ?     Para.  1: 100.     C.  40. 
Lies  —  lies,    again  —  and    still,    they   lie  !      Confess.    2  :  18. 

C.  169. 
could  not,  for  my  death,  (The  thing  that  tempts  me  most) 

help  speaking  lies.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  338.     C.  289. 
No  man  ever  told  one  great  truth,  that  I  know,  without  the 

help  of  a  good  dozen  of  lies  at  least,  generally  unconscious 

ones.     Soid-s  Tr.  2  :  354.     C.  296. 
Because  years  came  and  went,  and  more  and  more  Brought 

new  lies  with  them  to  be  loved  in  turn.     R.  and  B.  3 :  15. 

C.  420. 
Lies  to  God,  lies  to  man,  every  way  lies.     R.  and  B.  3  :  111. 

C.  458. 
For  lies  breed  lies.     R.  and  B.  3  :  180.     C.  486. 
She  thought,  moreover,  real  lies  were  lies  told  For  harm's  sake'; 

whereas  this  had  good  at  heart.    R.  and  B.  3  :  244.     C.  511. 
lies,  we  know  —  Inventions  we,  long  since,  turned  inside  out. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  332.     C.  545. 
none  may  boast  monopoly  Of  lies  and  trick  i'  the  tricking 

lying  world.     R.  and  B.  3  :  369.     C.  558. 
You  tell  too  many  lies  and  hurt  yourself.     Fra  Lippo  4  :  79. 

C.  344. 
so  much  truth  lives  there  'Neath  the  dead  heap  of  lies.     Dan. 

Bar.  6  :  311.     C.  958. 
shrewd  folk  who  forge  Lies  of  superior  fashion  day  by  day 

And  hour  by  hour.     Geo.  B.  D.G:  322.     C.  962. 
broach  lies.  Yet  brave  mankind  with  those  unaltered  eyes. 

Those  lips  that  keep  the  quietude  of  truth  ?     Geo.  B.  D. 

6 : 324.     C.  963. 
Alack,  one  lies  one's  self  Even  in  the  stating  that  one's  end 

was  truth.     Prince  H.  4  :  378.     C.  700. 
Lied.     Lied  is  a  rough  phrase  :  say  he  fell  from  truth  In  climb- 
ing towards  it !     Bean-St.  6  :  277.     C.  944. 
Life.     And  yet  those   blottings  chronicle  a  life.     Para.   1:47. 

C.  20. 
a  life  Spent  and  decided,  wasted  past  retrieve  Or  worthy  be- 
yond peer.     Para.  1 :  47.     C.  20. 
As  Life,  the  somewhat,  hangs  'twixt  naught  and  naught.     Sor. 

1 :  255.     C.  99. 
Oh  life,  life-breath.  Life-blood,  —  ere  sleep,  come  travail,  life 

ere  death!     ^or.  1:315.     C.  123. 


136  LIFE 

Life.     Life  the  evil  with   the   good  Which  make  up  Living. 

Sor.  1:255.     C.  99. 
Why  not  take  IVIy  life  at  once  ?     This  poor  formality  Is,  .  .  .  I 

uuworthy  you  !     King  C.  1:407.     C.  IGO.  ■ 

Her  life  had  many  a  hope  and  aim,  Duties  enough  and  little  ! 

cares.  And  now  was  quiet,  now  astir.    Evelyn  2  :  24.    C.  171.  j 

How  good  is  man's  life,  the  mere  living  !  how  fit  to  employ  j 

All  the  heart  and  the  soul  and  the  senses  forever  in  joy !  ^ 

Saul  2  :  49.     C.  180.  ] 

he  lets  me  praise   life,  Gives  assent,  yet  would   die  for  his 

own  part.     Saul  2  :  52.     C.  181.  j 

the  mere  mortal  life  held  in  common  by  man  and  by  brute  :  | 

In  our  flesh  grows  the  branch  of  this  life,  in  our  soul  it  ^ 

bears  fruit.     Saul  2  :  52,     C.  181.  i 

Life  will   try  his  nerves.  When  the  sky,  which  noticed  all, 

makes  no  disclosure.     Before  2  :  86.     C.  193. 
Just  see  what  life  is,  with  its  shifts  and  turns  !     Colombe  2  :  200. 

C.  239. 
With  life  forever  old  yet  new.  Changed  not  in  kind  but  in  de- 
gree.    Last  Ride  2  :  281.     C.  268. 
Oh,  such  a  life  as  he  resolved  to  live,  When  he  had  learned  it. 

Gram.  Fu7i.  2  :  311.     C.  279. 
Oh  life,  the  long  mutation  —  is  it  so  ?    Is  it  with  life  as  with 

the  body's  change  ?     Luria  2  :  377.     C.  305. 
—  Whose  life  re-teaches  us  what  life  should  be,  What  faith  is, 

loyalty  and  simpleness.     Luria  2  :  402.     C.  315. 
Satan's  old   saw  being  apt  here  —  skin  for  skin,  All  a  man 

hath  that  will  he  give  for  life.     R.  and  B.  3  :  29.     C.  426. 
Three  dead-weights  with  one  arm  to  lift   the  three  Out   of 

their  limbo  up  to  life  again.     R.  and  B.  3  :  42.     C.  430. 
This  life  is  brief  and  troubles  die  with  it :  Where  were  the 

prick    to   soar    up  homeward   else  ?      it.   and   B.    3 :  124. 

C.  463. 
a  soldier-bee  That  yields  his  life,  exenterate  with  the  stroke 

O'  the  sting  that  saves  the  hive.    R.  and  B.  3  :  187.    C.  489. 
Dipping  the   bough  of   life,  so  pleasant  once,  In   fire  which 

shrivelled  leaf  and  bud  alike.     R.  and  B.  3  :  206.     C.  496. 
Yes,  everybody  that   leaves   life  sees  all   Softened  and  bet- 
tered :  so  with  other  sights.     R.  and  B.  3  :  245.     C.  512. 
Life  means  with  me  successful  feigning  death,  Lying  stone- 
like, eluding  notice  so.     R.  and  B.  3  :  259.     C.  517. 
The  great   life  ;  see,  a  breath   and   it  is   gone  !     R.  and  B. 

3  :  276.     C.  524. 
This  life  is  training  and  a  passage  ;  pass.     R.  and  B.  3  :  387. 

C.  566. 
AVe  are  not  babes,  but  know  the  minute's  worth.  And  feel 

that  life  is  large  and  the  world  small.     R.  and  B.  3  :  387. 

C.  566. 


LIFE  137 

Life.    Life  is  probation  and  the  earth  no  goal  But  starting-point 
of  man.     R.  and  B.  3  :  388.     C.  5G6. 
Thou,  whose  own  life  winks  o'er  the  socket-edge.     R.  and  B'. 

3  :  401.     C.  571. 

With  manifold  and  plenitudinous  life,  Prompt  at  death's  men- 
ace to  give  blow  for  threat.     R.  and  B.  3  :  407.     C.  574. 

I've  had  my  life,  whate'ei-  I  lose  :  I  'm  right  ?  I've  got  the 
single  good  there  w^as  to  gain.     R.  and  B.  3  :  420.     C.  579. 

—  life,  without  absolute  use  Of  the  actual  sweet  therein,  is 
death,  not  life.     R.  and  B.  3  :  436.     C.  586. 

(Life,  you  may  mulct  and  minish  to  a  grain  Out  of  the  lump, 
so  that  the  grain  but  live.)     R.  and  B.  3  :  447.     C.  590. 

You  never  know  what  life  means  till  you  die  :  Even  through- 
out life,  'tis  death  that  makes  life  live.  R.  and  B.  3  :456. 
C.  593. 

Sirs,  my  first  true  word,  all  truth  and  no  lie,  Is  —  save  me 
notwithstanding  !     Life  is  all !     R.  and  B.  3  :  457.     C.  594. 

life,  that  insane  dream  we  take  For  waking  now,  because  it 
seems.     Eas.-Day  4  :  43.     C.  330. 

Whose  life  on  earth  aspired  to  be  One  altar-smoke,  so  pure  ! 
Joh.  Acjri.  4  :  72.     C.  341. 

Love,  we  are  in  God's  hand.  How  strange  now  looks  the  life 
he  makes  us  lead.     Andrea  4  :  84.     C.  346. 

Why  lose  this  life  i'  the  meantime,  since  its  use  May  be  to 
make  the  next  life  more  intense  ?  Bishop  B.  4 :  109. 
C.  356. 

what  we  call  this  life  of  men  on  earth,  This  sequence  of  the 
soul's  achievements  here.     Cleon  4  :  116.     C.  359. 

A  man  can  have  but  one  life  and  one  death.  One  heaven,  one 
hell.     In  aB.4::  131.     C.  .364. 

I  count  life  just  a  stuff  To  try  the  soul's  strength  on,  educe  the 
man.     Ina  B.4.:  146.     C.  370. 

Life   being  the  minute  of   mankind,  not   God's.     Prince   H. 

4  :  334.     C.  683. 

A  life  to  live  —  and  such  a  life  !  a  world  To  learn,  one's  life- 
time in,  —  and  such  a  world  !     Prince  H.  4  :  342.     C.  686. 

cheery  game  of  life,  True  yet  mimetic  warfare,  wliereby  man 
Does  his  best  with  his  utmost.     Prince  H.  4  :  370.     C.  697. 

life  is  lent.  From  first  to  last,  the  whole,  for  this  experiment 
Of  proving  ...  —  that  we  ourselves  are  true  !  Fijine 
4  :  419.     C.  722. 

Life  means  —  learning  to  abhor  The  false,  and  love  the  true, 
truth  treasured  snatch  by  snatch.     Fijine  4  :  421.     C.  723. 

that  squeeze  with  nature,  we  find  —  life.  Fijine  4  :  428. 
C.  727. 

Since  little  life  begins  where  great  life  ends.  Red  Cott.  5  :  25. 
C.  745. 

lead  the  still  life,  ply  the  wordless  task.  Ari.  A.o:  120.    C.  636. 


138  LIFE  — LIFE'S 

Life,  too  absurd  It  were  you  pitched  and  tossed  away  your 
life,  As  diamond  were  Scotch  -  pebble  i  Inn  A.  5:252. 
C.  777. 

Sound  and  sane,  My  life,  chastised  now,  couches  at  your  foot. 
/»jn.4.5:288.     C.  791. 

How  I  could  pass  Life  in  a  long  midsummer  day.  Prol.  Pacch. 
5  :  317.     C.  802. 

Have  you  found  your  life  distasteful?  At  the  3/.  5 :  334. 
C.  808. 

So,  life  can  boast  its  day,  like  leap-year,  Stolen  from  death  ! 
St.  Mart.  5  :  354.     C.  815. 

Why,  I  've  nothing  but  my  life,  —  here 's  my  head  !  cries 
Herv^  Kiel.     Herve  5  :  356.     C.  816. 

—  Life,  my  whole  sole  chance  to  prove  .  .  .  What  is  beaute- 
ous and  what  ugly,  right  to  strive  for,  right  to  shim.  La 
S.  6  :  64.     C.  853. 

Life  to  come  will  be  improvement  on  the  life  that 's  now  ;  de- 
stroy Body's  thwartings.     La  S.  6  :  68.     C.  855. 

Life  is  stocked  with  germs  of  torpid  life.    La  S.6  :  75.    C.  859. 

nowhere  I  detect  So  great  a  gift  as  this  —  God's  own  —  of 
human  life.     Ivan  6  :  139.     C.  885. 

Life  then,  God's  best  of  gifts.  For  what  shall  man  exchange  ? 
Ivan  6  :  139.     C.  885. 

till  the  long-past  life  appears  Like  an  outspread  map  of  coun- 
try.    Clive  6 -.loo.     C.  893. 

God  gives  each  man  one  life,  like  a  lamp,  then  gives  That 
lamp  due  measure  of  oil.     Muley.  6  :  165.     C.  898. 

this  life  proves  a  wine-press  —  blends  Evil  and  good,  both 
fruits  of  Paradise.     Joch.  6  :  231.     C  926. 

be  frank !  A  good  thing  or  a  bad  thing  —  Life  is  which  ? 
Bean-St.  6  :  2^71.     C.  942. 

Life,  from  birth  to  death.  Means  —  either  looking  back  on 
harm  escaped,  Or  looking  forward.  Bean-St.  6 :  272. 
C.  942. 

man's  sum  of  moments,  bad  and  good,  That  make  up  Life. 
Bean-St.  6  :  272.     C.  942. 

He  talks  it,  and  glibly,  as  life  were  a  load  Man  fain  would  be 
rid  of.     Apol.  and  F.  6 -.288.     C.  949. 

Let  earth's  old  life  once  more  enmesh  us.  You  with  old  pleas- 
ure, me  —  old  pain.     Specul.  6  :  394  :  7  :  13.     C.  989. 

How  I  lived,  ere  my  human  life  began.  Reph.  6  :  431;  7  :  95. 
C.  1004. 

Then  life  is  —  to  wake  not  sleep,  Rise  and  not  rest,  but  press 
From  earth's  level.     Rev.  6  :  439  ;  7  :  111.     C.  1006. 
Life-cord,     fate   shears  The   life-cord  prompt   enough   whose 

last  fine  threads  You  fritter.     Sor.  1  :  323.     C.  126. 
Life's,     there's  life's  pact.     Perhaps  probation  —  do   /  know? 
God  does.     /.  Lee  4  :  160.     C.  375. 


, 


LIFE'S-STUFF  —  LIP  139 

Lif e's-stuff .     Gaze  like  my  very  life's-stufp,  marble  —  marbly 

Even  to  the  silence  !     Pippa  1  :  344.     C.  130. 
Lives.     Some  with  lives  that  came  to  nothing,  some  with  deeds 

as  well  undone.     Toccata  2  :  3G.     C.  175. 
Lifetime.     Till  this  brief  trouble  of  a  lifetime  end.     Ari.  A. 

5:240.     C.  681. 
Lift.     Lift  thy  brow,  Man,  the  immortal,  that  wast  never  fooled 

With  gifts  no  gifts  at  all.     Chas.  A.  6  :  3G2.     C.  978. 
Light,     light,    thwarted,    breaks    A  limpid   purity  to  rainbow 

flakes.     ;Sor.  1:297.     C.  116. 
Man's  breath   were  vain  to  light  a  virgin  wick.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  17.     C.  421. 
Delirious  with  the  plenitude  of  light  Should  interfuse  him 

to  the  finger-ends.     R.  and  B.  3  :  390.     C.  567. 
O  light,  light,  light,  I  hail  light  everywhere.  No  matter  for 

the  murk  that  was.     Ari.  A.  5  :  111.     C.  635. 
a  living  glory-bath  Of  air  and  light  where  seems  to  float  and 

move    The    wooded    watered    country.      Lm    A.    5  :  244. 

C.  774. 
Where  's  hope  for  such  as  wage  War  against  light  ?     Light 's 

left,    light 's    here,  I    hold    light    still.     Ned    B.    6 :  150. 

C.  891. 
Light-hearted.     I  was  light-hearted  in  my  prime,  I  am  light- 
hearted  now  ;  what  would  you  have  ?     Para.  1 :  90.     C.  36. 
Lightning.     The  suljjhur  may  be  lightning  or  a  squib  —  He  '11 

know  in   a   miuute,  but  till   then,  he  doubts.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  132.     C.  467. 

Pause  for  pity.  Lightning  !  nor  leave  a  cicatrice  On  those 
bright  marbles.     Bad  D.  III.  6  :  398  ;  7  :  21.     C.  990. 

Lightning's.  Silk  breaks  lightning's  blow!  Ari.  A.  5:136. 
C.  642. 

Like.     You  don't  like  what  you  only  like  too  much.    Fra  Lippo 

4  :  79.     C.  344. 

More  I  think  about  and  less  I  like  the  thing.     Inn  A.  5  :  254. 

C.  778. 
Liked,     she  liked  whate'er  She  looked  on,  and  her  looks  went 

everywhere.     My  Last  D.  2  :  233.     C.  252. 
Liking,     why  miist  one,  for  the  love  foregone,  Scout  mere  lik- 
ing ?     Pretty  W.  2  :  78.     C.  191. 
Lion-like.      Who    lion-like    roars    now,    mouse-fashion    will 

squeak.     3I.-m.  Meg  6  :  405  :  7  :  41.     C.  993. 
Lionard.     a  Lionard  going  cheap  Lf  it  should  prove,  .  .  .  that 

Joconde  Whereof  a  copy  contents  the  Louvre  !     R.  and  B. 

3:2.     C.  415. 
Lip.     A  sharp  and  restless  lip,  so  well  combine  With  that  calm 

brow.     5o;-.  1:203.     C.  79. 
That  smatch  o'  the  slaver  blistering  on  your  lip.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  232.     C.  507. 


140  LIPS  — LIVES 

Iiips.      lips  which  bloom  Like  a  mountain  berry.     Pau.  1:5. 
C-  4. 
lips  which  bleed  Like  a  mountain  berry.     Pau.  1:5.* 
a  curl  of  the  lips  where  the  spirit  kissed.    Stat,  and  B.  2  :  325. 

C.  285. 
those  blood-bright  eyes,  And  black  lips  wrinkling  o'er  the 
flash  of  teeth,  And  tongues  that  lolled.     R.  and  B.  3 :  14. 
C.  420. 
The  lips,  compressed  a  little,  came  forward  too,  Careful  for  a 

whole  world  of  sin  and  pain.     R.  and  B.  3  :  233.     C.  507. 
a  vulgar  interchange  of  lips.     R.  and  B.  3  :335.     C.  54G. 
"While   cheeks  burn,   arms  open,   eyes  shut  and  lips   meet ! 

Now  6  :  392  ;  7  :  8.     C.  988. 
On  the  lips,  that  commonplace  Perfection  of  honest  grace  ! 
Bad  D.  II.  6  :  398  ;  7  :  19.     C.  990. 
Lippo.     I  am  poor  brother  Lippo,  by  your  leave  !     Fra  Lippo 

4  :  74.     C.  342. 
Lisp.     Pass  off  human  lisp  as  echo  of  the  sphere-song  out  of 

reach.     La  S.  6  :  59.     C.  851. 
Listen.     You,  Sir,  who  listen  but  interpose  no  word.     R.  and 

B.  3 : 61.     C.  438. 

(She  makes  me  listen  if  I  will  or  no.)     R.  and  B.  3  :  205. 

C.  496. 

I   listen  while  you  speak,  —  Assured  that  what  you  say  is 

false,  the  same.     R.  and  B.  3  :  263.     C.  519. 
Little.     In  little,  light,  warmth,  life  are  blessed  —  Which,  in 

the  large,  who  sees  to  bless  ?     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  302.     C.  955. 
Littleness.     Littleness  of  love   Befits  the  littleness  of  loving 

thing.     Cherries  6  :  264.     C.  939. 
leaving  little  minds  their  liberty  Of  littleness  to  blunder  on 

through  life.     Prince  H.  4  :  360.     C.  693. 
Live.     Too  live  the  life  grew,  golden  and  not  gray.     Andrea 

4  :  86.     C.  347. 
And  vet  as  certain  as  that  I  draw  breath,  —  I  would  fain  live, 

not  die  —  oh  no,  not  die  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  206.     C.  496. 
it  pleased  him  to  live  So  long  as  God  please,  and  just  how 

God  please.     KarsMsh  4: :  GS.     C.  340. 
You   live,   and   rightly  sympathize    with   life,   With   action, 

power,  success.     In  a  B.  A:  147.     C.  370. 
Oh,  live  and  love  worthily,  bear  and  be  bold  !     /.  Lee  4  :155. 

C.  374. 
Do  let  a  man  for  once  live  as  man  likes  !     Red  Cott.  5  :  48. 

C.  7.54. 
What  have  I  proved  of  life  ?     To  live,  indeed,  That  much  I 

learned.     Joch.  6  :  212.     C.  918. 
Live  and  learn,  Xot  first  learn  and  then  live,  is  our  concern. 

Chris.-Sm.  6 -.318.     C.  961. 
Lives,     one  who,  in  the  world,  Both  lives  and  likes  life's  way, 


LIVES  — LOOKING  141 

Nor    wishes    the   wings    unfurled.     .Prol.   Fifine  4:383. 
C.  702. 

Lives.  What  once  lives  never  dies  —  what  here  attains  To  a 
beginning,  has  no  end.     Ger.  de  L.  6  :3o2.     C.  974. 

Lived.     I  have  lived  all  life  When  it  is  most  alive,  where  stran- 
gest fate  New-shapes  it  past  surmise,     Pau.  1: 17.     C.  8. 
My   life  must   be  lived  out  in  foam  and  roar,  No  question. 

,Sor.  1:279.     C.  108. 
I  have  lived  ...  so  much  since  then,  .  .  .  Ransacked  the 

ages,  spoiled  the  climes.     Evelyn  2  :  24.     C.  171. 
None  may  live  two  lives  :  I   have  lived   mine  through.  Die 
where  I  first  stand  still.     Ari.  A.  5: 129.     C.  640. 

Living.     The  living  are  the  dead  now  :  death  be  life  !     Ari.  A. 
5  :  101.     C.  629. 
Oh,  the  wild  joys  of  living  !     Saul  2  :  49.     C.  180. 

Liver.  So,  liver  fizz,  law  flit  and  Latin  fly  As  we  rub  hands  o'er 
dish  by  way  of  grace  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  281.     C.  526. 

Loathsomeness.  I  am  out  of  breath,  But  loathsomeness  we 
needs  must  hurry  past.     Ari.  A.  5  :109.     C.  632. 

Loftier.  Leave  him  —  still  loftier  than  the  world  suspects,  Liv- 
ing and  dying.     Gram.  Fun.  2  :  313.     C,  280. 

Log-Fire.  Praise  the  good  log-fire  !  Winter  howls  without. 
Two  Poets  6  :  77.     C.  859. 

Logs.   Heap  logs  and  let  the  blaze  laugh  out !   Pam.  1:61.    C.  25. 

Logic.  Makes  logic  levigate  the  big  crime  small.  R.  and  B. 
3:26.     C.  425. 

Loiterers,  autumn  loiterers  just  as  fancy-free  As  the  midges 
in  the  sun.     Para.  1  :  44.     C.  19. 

London.     Good  gloomy  London.     Red  Coit.  5  :  97.     C.  773. 

Lonely.  Lonely,  I  placed  the  chair  to  help  me  seat  Your  fan- 
cied presence.     Inn  A.  5  :287.     C.  791. 

Longing.  This  mad  and  thriveless  longing.  Para.  1 :  77. 
C.  31. 

Look.     Hold  me  but  safe  again  within  the  bond  Of  one  immor- 
tal look  !     Eurydice  4  :  217.     C.  395. 
You  could  look,  if  it  pleased  you,  into  hearts  ;  But  are  too  in- 
dolent and  fond  of  watching  Your  own.     Colomhe  2  :  222. 
C.  247. 

Looked.     She  should  never  have  looked  at  me  If  she  meant  I 
should  not  love  her  !     Crist.  2  :  18.     C.  169. 
She  looked  at  him,  as  one  who  awakes.     Stat,  and  B.  2  :  322. 
C.  284. 

Lookers-on.  Complacent  lookers-on  that  laugh,  —  perchance 
Shake  head  as  their  friend's  horse-play  grows  too  rough. 
R.andB.^-.^ll.     C.  562. 

Looking.  Keep  but  ever  looking,  whether  with  the  body's  eye 
or  the  mind's,  and  j'ou  will  soon  find  something  to  look  ou  ! 
Pi>;;a  1:341.     C.  134. 


142  LOOKING-GLASS  —  LOVE 

Looking-glass.      daughters   lured  as   larks   by  looking-glass ! 

R.  awl  B.  3  :  75.     C.  444. 
Lord.     A  beak-nosed  bushy-bearded  black-haired  lord,  Lean, 
pallid,  low  of  stature  yet  robust.     R.  and  B.  3  :  18.     C.  421. 
Lorenzo  in  Lucina.      Lorenzo  in  Lucina, —  here's  a  church 

To  hold  a  crowd.     R.  and  B.  3  :33.     C.  427. 
Losel.     Mere    losel    in   body  and  soul.      Which  G  :  401  ;  7  :  29. 

C.  991. 
Losses,     our  losses  have  made  ns  thrifty.     Pied  Piper  2  :  285. 

C.  270. 
Lost.     Blot  out  his  name,  then,  record  one  lost  soul  more.  One 
task  more  declined.     Lost  Z.  2  :4.     C.  164. 
God  help  all  poor  souls  lost  in  the  dark  !     Her,  Trag.  2  :  316. 

C.  281. 
such  a  one  was  strong,  and  such  was  bold,  And  such  was  fortu- 
nate, yet  each  of  old  Lost,  lost !    Childe  R.  2  :  336.    C.  289. 
lost  earnestness.  Lost  will  to  work,  lost  power  to  even  express 

The  need  of  working.     Sor.  1  :  292.     C.  114. 
And   we   missed   it,  lost   it   forever.     Youth   and  .4.4: 219. 

C.  396. 
So  was  the  sheep  lost,  which  the  Shepherd  found  And  never 
lost  again.     Red  Cott.  5  :  90.     C.  770. 
Lot.     Why  claim  escape  from  man's  predestined  lot  Of  being 
beaten  and  baffled?  —  God's   decree.     R.  and  B.   3:174. 
C.  483. 
Not  once  did  a  suspicion  visit  me  How  very  different  a  lot  is 
mine  From  any  other  woman's.     R.  and  B.  3  :  239.     C.  509. 
Louvre,     the  heroes  flung  pell-mell  On  the  Louvre,  face  and 

flank  !     Herve  5  :  358.     C.  816. 
Love.     How  can  that  course  be  safe  which  from  the  first  Pro- 
duces carelessness  to  human  love  ?     Para.  1:41.     C.  17. 
A  monstrous  spectacle  upon  the  earth,  ...  —  A  being  know- 
ing not  what  love  is.     Para.  1  :42.     C.  18. 
love  which  spends  itself  In  silent  mad  idolatry  of  some  Pre- 
eminent mortal.     Para.  1 :  80.     C.  32. 
I  say,  such  love  is  never  blind  ;  but  rather  Alive  to  every  the 
minutest  spot  Which  mars  its  object,  and  which  hate  (sup- 
posed So  vigilant  and  searching)  dreams  not  of.     Para.  1 :  80. 
C.  32. 
If  there  be  fiends  who  seek  to  work  our  hurt.  To  ruin  and 
drag    down  earth's  mightiest  spirits  Even  at    God's  foot, 
't  will  be  from  such  as  love.     Para.  1:80.     C.  32. 
And  blind,  oft-failing,  yet  believing  love,  A  half-enlightened, 

often-checkered  trust.     Para.  1  :  117.     C.  46. 
love's  undoing  Taught  me  the  worth  of  love  in  man's  estate. 

Para.  1  :  121.     C.  48. 
love  preceding  Power,  and  with  much  power,  always  much 
more  love.     Para.  1  :  121.     C.  48. 


LOVE  143 

Love.     Surely  too,  some  way  He   is   the  better  for  my  love. 

Straf.  1  :  166.     C.  63. 
love  is  whole  And  true  .  .  .  most  sure  Of  its  own  truth  at 

least ;  nor  may  endure  A  crowd  to  see  its  face.     Sor.  1 :  209. 

C.  81. 
best  love  of  all  Is  God's.     Pippa  1:331.     C.  1.30. 
Through  the  Valley  of  Love  I  went,  In  the  lovingest  spot  to 

abide.     Pippa  l:3i7.     C.  137. 
God  above  Is  great  to  grant,  as  mighty  to  make,  And  creates 

the  love  to  reward  the  love.     Evelyn  2  :  24.     C.  171. 
Shut  them  in.  With  their  triumphs  and  their  glories  and  the 

rest  !     Love  is  best.     Love  2  :  27.     C.  172. 
had   love  but  the  warrant,  love's  heart  to  dispense  !      Saul 

2:55.     C.  183. 
I  report,  as  a  man  may  of  God's  work  —  all 's  love,  yet  all 's 

law.     Saul  2:55.     C.  183. 
Do  I  find  love  so  full  in  my  nature,  God's  ultimate  gift.  That 

I  doubt  his  own  love  can  compete  with  it?     Saul  2:56. 

C.  183. 
As  thy  Love  is  discovered  almighty,  almighty  be  proved  Thy 

power  ...   of  being  Beloved  !     Saul  2  :  57.     C.  184. 
Thy  love  shall  hold  me  fast  Until  the  little  minute's  sleep  is 

past.     Any  Wife  2 -.71.     C.  189. 
Oh,  what  a  fancy  ecstatic  .  .  .  Love  to  be  saved  for  it,  prof- 
fered to,  spent  on  !     Miscon.  2  :  73.     C.  189. 
I  know  !   the   world  proscribes   not  love.     Respecta.   2  :  79. 

C.  191. 
Strange !    that   very  way    Love   begun.      In   a    Year   2  :  82. 

C.  192. 
I  had  wealth  and  ease.  Beauty,  youth  :  Since  my  lover  gave 

me  love,  I  gave  these.     In  a  Year  2  :  83.     C.  192. 
"Love's  so   different   with  us   men!"      In   a    Year   2:84. 

C.  193. 
Once  but  of  love,  the  poesv,  the  passion,  Drink  but  once  and 

die  !      Women  and  R.  2  :85.     C.  193. 
served  that  flower-like  love  of  hers  To  climb  by,  like  the  cling- 
ing gourd.     Druses  2  :  114.     C.  204. 
the  only  one  Able  to  win  her  love,  the  only  one  Unable  to  ac- 
cept her  love  ?     Druses  2  :  117.     C.  205. 
It  seemed  love,  but  it  was  not  love  :  How  could  I  love  while 

thou  adoredst  me  ?     Druses  2  :  140.     C.  214. 
love  Is  a  short  word  that  says  so  very  much  !     A  Blot  2  :  167. 

C.  226. 
Find  out  their  love,  —  I  could  not  ;  find  their  fear,  —  I  would 

not  ;    find   their    like,  —  I   never   shall.       Colombe   2  :  195. 

C.  237. 
Love  has  no  great  concernment,  thinks  the  world,  With  a 

Duke's  marriage.     Colombe  2  :  214.     C.  244. 


I 


144  LOVE 

Love,     bold  confidence,  Open   superiority,  free  pride  —  Love 

owns  not.     Colombe  2  :  217.     C.  245. 
And  is  love  then  the  sole  reward  of  love  ?     Colombe  2  :  225. 

C.  248. 
love   is   incompatible   With    falsehood  —  purifies,  assimilates 

All  other  passions  to  itself.     Colombe  2:228.     C.  250. 
And  tliou  shalt  know,  .  .  .   How  love  is  the  only  good  in  the 

world.     Flight  2  :  303.     C.  276. 
A  sudden  thoii<rht  of  one  so  pale  For  love  of  her,  and  all  in 

vain.     Porph.  2  :  329.     C.  286. 
Love  like  mine  must  have  return,  I  thought :  no  river  starts 

but  to  some  sea.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  343.     C.  291. 
Love  is  a  very  compound  thing.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  352.     C.  295. 
When   did   I   say   pure   love 's   impossible  ?      Luria   2  :  363. 

C.  299. 
Half  at  the  least  are,  call  it  how  you  please.  In  love  with  her 

—  I  don't  except  the  priests.     R.  and  B.  3  :  87.     C.  448. 
The  importunate  shamelessl3"-protested  love  Which  brought 

him,    though   reluctant,  to   her   feet.     R.   and  B.   3  :  127. 

C.  464. 
Xot  for  the  natural  end,  the  love  of  man  For  woman  whether 

love  be  virtue  or  vice.     R.  and  B.  3  :  128.     C.  405. 
love  that  bites  and  claws  like  hate,  or  ,  .  .  hate  That  mops  and 

mows  like  love.     R.  and  B.  3  :  232.     C.  507. 
And   downright   love   atones   for    everything !      R.    and   B. 

3  :  241.     C.  510. 
Love  will  be  helpful  to  me  more  and  more  I'  the  coming 

course,  the   new  path  I  must  tread.     R.  and  B.  3 :  277. 

C.  524. 
melting  wiles,  delieiousest  deceits.  The  whole  redoubted  ar- 
mory of  love  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  325.     C.  542. 
(why  live  Except  for  love,  —  how  love  unless  they  know?) 

R.  and  B.  3  :  385.     C.  565. 
Can  she  feel  no  love  ?   Let  her  show  the  more,  Sham  the 

worse,  damn   herself   praiseworthily  !     R.  and  B.  3 :  435. 

C.  585. 
All   women   cannot   give   men   love,   forsooth !      it.   and  B. 

3  :  435.     C.  585. 
your  affianced  bride,  Has  dust  now  in  the  eyes  that  held  the 

love.     R.  and  B.  3  :  455.     C.  593. 
What 's  love,  what 's  faith  without  a  worst  to  dread  ?     Lack- 
lustre jewelry  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  456.     C.  593. 
How  human  love,  in  varied  shapes,  might  work  As  glory,  or 

as  rapture,  or  as  grace.     R.  and  B.  3  :  472.     C.  599. 
Man,  therefore,  stands  on  his  own  stock  Of  love  and  power  as 

a  pin-point  rock.     Chris.-Eve  ^•.8.     C.  318. 
But   love   is   the   ever-springing   fountain.     Chris.-Eve  4 : 8. 

C.  319. 


LOVE  145 

Love,     be  love  less  or  more  lu  the  heart  of  man,  he  keeps  it 

shut  Or  opes  it  wide,  as  he  pleases,  but  Love's  sum  remains 

what  it  was  before.     Chris.-Eve  4:8.     C.  319. 
love  which,  on  earth,  amid  all  the  shows  of  it.  Has  ever  been 

seen  the  sole  good  of  life  in  it.     Chris.-Eve  4:9.     C.  319. 
God  .  .  .  Disdains  not  his  own  thirst  to  slake  At  the  poorest 

love  was  ever  offered.     Chris.-Eve  4  :  1*2.     C.  320. 
Love  was  the  startling  thing,  the  new  :  Love  was  the  all-suf- 
ficient too.     Chris.-Eve  4  :  16.     C.  321. 
Love  shut  our  eyes,  and  all  seemed  right.     True,  the  world's 

eyes  are  open  now.     Chris.-Eve  4  :  16.     C.  321. 
Too    much    love   there    can    never    be.      Chris.-Eve  4 :  17. 

C.  322. 
I  felt  at  once  as  if  there  ran  A  shoot  of  love  from  my  heart 

to  the  man.     Chris.-Eve  4  :  19.     C.  322. 
If  love 's  dead  there,  it  has  left  a  ghost.     Chris.-Eve  4 :  25. 

C.  324. 
Unlearned  love  was  safe  from  spurning  —  Can't  we  respect 

j'our  loveless  learning  ?     Chris.-Eve  4  :  25.     C.  325. 
I  let  the  world  go,  and  take  love  !     Eas.-Day  4  :  53.     C.  334. 
Love  survives  in  me,  albeit  those  I  love  be  henceforth  masks 

and  shows.     Eas.-Day  4  :  53.     C.  334. 
I  mind  how  love  repaired  all  ill.  Cured  wrong,  soothed  grief, 

made  earth  amends.     Eas.-Day  4  :  53.     C.  334. 
Is  this  thy  final  choice  ?     Love  is  the  best  ?     'T  is  somewhat 

late  !     Eas.-Day  4  :  54.     C.  334. 
It  is  the  idea,  the  feeling  and  the  love,  God  means  mankind 

should  strive  for.     Bishop  B.  4  :  106.     C.  355. 
Set  free  my  love,  and  see  what  love  can  do  Shown  in  my  life 

—  what   work   will   spring   from   that !     In   a   B.   4^:  136. 

C.  366. 
Love  has  been  so  long  Subdued  in  me,  eating  me  through  and 

through,  That  now  't  is  all  of  me.     In  a  B.4: :  136.     C.  366. 
For  women  .  .  .  There  is  no  good  of  life  but  love  —  but  love  ! 

In  a  B.4::  139.     C.  367. 
Love.  Give  love,  ask  only  love,  and  leave  the  rest !     In  a  B. 

4:139.     C.  367. 
And  love,  love  came  at  end  of  every  phrase.     In  a  B.  4: 142. 

C.  368. 
Love  is  begun  ;  this  much  is  come  to  pass  :  The  rest  is  easy. 

In  a  B.4::  142.     C.  368. 
Yes,  love  lives  best  in  its  effect  ;  and  mine  Full  in  its  own 

life,  yearns  to  live  in  yours.     In  a  B.  4: 145.     C.  369. 
love  greatens  and  glorifies  Till  God  's  aglow,  to  the  lo\'ing 

eyes.   In   what  was   mere   earth  before.     /.   Lee  4 :  156. 

C.  374. 
How  the  light,  light  love,  he  has  wings  to  fly  At  suspicion  of 

a  bond.     /.  Lee  4  :  157.     C.  374. 


146 


LOVE 


Love.     Love  settling  unawares  !     J.  Lee  4  :  158.     C.  374. 

If  you  loved  only  what  were  worth  your  love,  Love  were 
clear  gain,  and  wholly  well  for  you.    J.Lee  4  :  161.     C.  375. 

Your  soul 's  locked  fast  ;  but,  love  for  a  key,  You  might  let 
it  loose.     ./.  Lee  4  :  164.     C.  376. 

Love  that  was  life,  life  that  was  love.    J.  Lee  4  :  164.    C.  376. 

what 's  the  earth  With  all  its  art,  verse,  music,  worth  —  Com- 
pared with  love,  found,  gained,  and  kept  ?  L)\s  Al.  4  :  174. 
C.  379. 

love,  .  .  .  the  sole  spark  from  God's  life  at  strife  With  death. 
D'ls  AL  4  :  177.     C.  380. 

I  see  the  whole  design,  I,  who  saw  power,  see  now  Love  per- 
fect too.     Ben  Ezra  4  :  187.     C.  384. 

For  life,  with  all  it  yields  of  joy  and  woe,  And  hope  and  fear, 
...  Is  just  our  chance  o'  the  prize  of  learning  love.  Death 
in  D.  4  :  196.     C.  387. 

What  if  there  be  love  Behind  the  will  and  might,  as  real  as 
they  ?     Death  in  D.  4  :  202.     C.  390. 

love,  strenuous  all  the  more  For  storm,  struck  deeper  root 
and  choicer  fruitage  bore.     Fifine  4 :  396.     C.  709. 

While,  oh,  how  all  the  more  will  love  become  intense  Here- 
after.    Fifne  4  :  406.     C.  715. 

Love  is  all,  and  Death  is  naught !  quoth  She.  Epil.  Fijine 
4:444.     C.  736. 

Love  proffered  and  accepted  then  and  there  !  Such  potency 
in  word  and  look  has  truth.     Red  Cott.  5 :  35.     C.  749. 

Love  bids  touch  truth,  endure  truth,  and  embrace  Truth, 
though,  embracing  truth,  love  crush  itself.  Red  Cott. 
5  :  94.     C.  772. 

Love  smiles  '  rogue  '  and  '  wretch  '  When  '  sweet '  and  '  dear  ' 
seem  vapid.     Ari.  A.  5  :156.     C.  651. 

And  what  stings  love  from  faint  to  flamboyant  But  the  fear- 
sprinkle  ?     Inn  A.  5: 279.     C.  787. 

lawless  love  disparted  loves.     Inn  A.  5:  279.     C.  787. 

Love  may  use  hate  but  —  turn  to  hate,  itself  —  Turn  even  to 
indifference  —  no,  indeed  !     Inn  A.  5: 286.     C.  790. 

Ah,  dead  love  !  I  invoke  thy  ghost  To  show  the  murderer 
where  thy  heart  poured  life.     Inn  A.  5  :286.     C.  790. 

not  the  spoken  but  the  speechless  love  Waits  answer  ere  I  rise 
and  go  my  way.     Inn  A.  5  : 290.     C.  792. 

in  every  love,  or  soon  or  late.  Soul  must  awake  and  seek  out 
soul  for  soul.     Inn  A.  5  -.294:.     C.  794. 

Love,  the  love  whole  and  sole  without  alloy  !  Numph.  6  :  348. 
C.  813. 

a  beauty  that  betrays  Love  still  at  work  with  the  artificer. 
Fw<7u>.  5:364.     C.  819. 

a  crown  I  hoped  to  cast  Be  fore  your  love,  my  love  should  crown 
at  last.     Forgiv.  5  :  366.     C.  820. 


f 


LOVE  147 

Love.     Oh  how  but,  losing  love,  does  whoso  loves  sueeeecl  By 

the  death-pang  to  the  birth-throe.     La  S.  6  :  G6.     C.  855. 
—  one  string  that  made  '  Love  '  sonnd  soft  was  snapt  in  twain. 

Never  to  be  heard  again.     Two  Poets^  6  :  11.5.     C.  874. 
tell  him  that  a  girl's  "  Love  "  comes  aptly  in  when  gruff  Grows 

his  singing.    (There,  enough  !)      Two  Poets  6  :  IIG.     C.  874. 
Love,  the  milk  that  sweetens  man  his  meal  —  alas,  you  lack. 

Pietro  6  :  172.     C.  901. 
love  —  life's  milk  which  daily,  hourly.  Blockheads  lap.   Pietro 

6 : 180.     C.  905. 
Breathe  but  one  breath  Rose-beauty  above,  And  all  that  was 

death  Grows  life,  grows  love,  Grows  love  !      Wanting  6  :  193. 

C.  911. 
that  royal  crown  abjured  Just  because  its  bars  immured  Love 

too  much  ?     Crist,  and  M.  6  :  206.     C.  915. 
Love  should  be  absolute  love,  faith  is  in  fulness  or  naught. 

Ixion  6 -.210.     C.  917. 
Be  love  your  light   and  trust  your  guide,  with  these  explore 

my  heart  !     Epil.  Shah  A.  6:  246.     C.  932. 
Love,  —  in  the  claim   for  love,  that 's  gratitude   For  appre- 
hended pleasure,  nowise  doubt !     Pillar  6  :269.     C.  941. 
wholly  solely  love  from  first  to  last  —  Truth  —  all  the  rest  a 

lie.     Dan.  Bar.  6  :  309.     C.  958. 
Laugh  Here  lies  he  among  the  false  to  Love  —  Love's  loyal 

liegeman  once.     Dan.  Bar.  6  :  310.     C.  958. 
Be  the  moon  the  moon  :  my  Love  I  place  beside  it.     Poetics 

6 : 393  ;  7 : 10.     C.  988. 
Through  the  love  in  a  girl  !     Pearl  6  :  393  ;  7  :  12.     C.  988. 
But  see  his  eyes  that  follow  mine  —  love  lasts  there,  anyhow. 

White  W.  6  :  394 ;  7  :  14.     C.  989. 
The  love  .  .  .  Seems  terribly  like  what  perhaps  gains  God's 

preference.     Which  ?  6  :  401 ;  7  :  29.     C.  991. 
Such  love  were  true  love  :  love  that  way  who  can  !  Some  one 

that 's  born  half  woman  not  whole  man.     Bea.  Sig.  6  :  414  ; 

7  :  60.     C.  997. 
Power  with  its  match — immense  Love,  limitless,  unbeset  By 

hindrance.     Rev.  6  :  438  ;  7  :  108.     C.  1006. 
were   love  but  shown  Stript  of  the  veils  that  hide  —  Power's 

self  now  manifest  !     Rev.  6  :438  ;  7  :  109.     C.  1006. 
Life  has  made  clear  to  me  That,  strive  but  for  closer  view, 

Love  were  as  plain.     Rev.  6  :  439  ;  7  :  112.     C.  1007. 
I  would  love  infinitely,  and  be  loved  !     Paro.  1:55.     C.  23. 
Yet  do  one  thing  at  'least  I  can  —  Love  a  man  or  hate  a  man 

Supremely.     Pippa  1  :  347.     C.  137. 
Give   her   but  a  least   excuse   to   love   me!     Pippa   1:348. 

C.  137. 
You  '11  love  me  yet  !  —  and  I  can  tarry  Your  love's  protracted 

growing.     Pippa  1  :  359.     C.  142. 


148  LOVE 

Love.     Is  it  not  like  he  '11   love  me  at  the   last  ?     King   V. 

1:371.     C.146. 
How  is  it  under  our  control  To  love  or  not  to  love  ?     Two  in 

C.  2  :  72.     C.  189. 
My    whole   life   long   I   learned   to   love.      One   Way  2  :  75. 

C.  190. 
I  love  her  —  vou  don't  know  What  those  three  small  words 

mean  !     A  Blot  2  :  173.     C.  228. 
If  I  knew  any  heart,  as  mine  loved  you,  Loved  me,  though  in 

the  vilest  breast  't  were  lodged,  I  should,  I  think,  he  forced 

to  love  again.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :343.     C.  291. 
Thus,  two  ways,  does  she  love  her  love  to  the  end.  And  hate 

her  hate,  —  death,  hell  is  no  such  price  To  pay  for  these,  — 

lovers  and  haters  hold.     R.  and  B.  3  :  138.     C.  469. 
So  he  was  made  ;  he  nowise  made  himself  :  I  could  not  love 

him,  but  his  mother  did.     R.  and  B.  3  :  276.     C.  524. 
where  finds  he  An  instinct   that  compels  him  love  his  wife  ? 

Rather   is     he    presumably    her   foe.      R.  and  B.   3 :  302. 

C.  534. 
Suppose  this  man  could  love,  unhappily,  And  would  love,  dared 

he  only  let  love  show  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  331.     C.  544. 
I  love  it  with   mv  heart  :  unsatisfied,  I  try  it  with  my  reason, 

nor  discept.     R.  and  B.  3  :386.     C.  565. 
All  my  soul   breaks   forth.     How  I  do  love  you  !     Give  my 

love  its  way  !     In  a  B.4::  131.     C.  364. 
So  men  make  women  love  them,  while  they  know  No  more  of 

women's  hearts  than  ...     In  a  B.  4: :  133.     C.  364. 
Cannot  men  love  ?     In  a  B.  4:  :  143.     C.  368. 
They  love  so   many  women  in  their  youth,  And  even  in  age 

they  all  love  whom  they  please.     In  a  B.  4: 143.     C.  368. 
I  love  once  as  I  live  but  once.     In  a  B.  4: 151.     C.  372. 
Who  art  thou,    with  stinted  soul  And  stunted  body,  thus  to 

cry,  '  I  love,  —  shall  that  be  life's  strait  dole  ?  I  must  live 

beloved  or  die  ! '     J.  Lee  A:  163.     C.  376. 
this  is  certain  of  my  soul,  I  love  her  !  in  despite  of  all  I  know. 

Red  Cott.  5  :  41.     C.  752. 
If  I  should  love  my  husband,  must  I  needs  Sacrifice  straight- 
way all  the  world  to  him.     Inn  A.  5  :  269.     C.  784. 
Do  I  love  him,  does  he   love  me,  do  both  Mistake  for  know- 
ledge —  easy  ignorance  ?     Inn  A.  5  :272.     C.  785. 
I  thought  "  The  gladlier  Lives  my  friend  because  I  love  him 

still  !  "     Fears  5  :  345.     C.  811. 
Can  we  love  but  on  condition,  that  the  thing  we  love  must 

die  ?    La  S.  6:  65.     C.  854. 
To  love  —  That  lesson  was  to  learn  not  here — but  there  — 

On  earth,  not  here  !     Joch.  6  :  232.     C.  927. 
all  I  seem  to  know  Is  —  I  know  nothing  save  that  love  I  can 

Boundlessly,  endlessly.     Pillar  6  :  267.     C.  940. 


LOVE  — LOVED  149 

Love.     So  let  us  say  —  not  *  Since  we  know,  we  love,'  But  rather 

'Since  we  love,  we  know  enough.'     Pillar  G  :  269.     C.  941. 
Love  once  —  e'en  love's  disappointment  endears  !     Apol.  and 

F.  6  :  292.     C.  951. 
This  tick  of  our  life-time's  one  moment  you  love  me  !     Now 

6:392;   7:8.     C.  988. 
Love-letters.     Love-letters  from  his  wife  who  cannot   write, 

Love-letters   in   reply   o'    the   priest.      R.   and   B.   3  :  97. 

C.  452. 
Love-star.     Since  the  first  timid  trembling  into  life  O'  the  love- 
star  till  its  stand  at  fiery  full.     R.  and  B.  3  :  57.     C.  436. 
Love-tales,     as  a  worn-out  queen's  face  some  remind  Of  her 

extreme  youth's  love-tales.     Sor.  1  :  213.     C.  82. 
Love's.   Love's  rock-built  Tower,  shalt  fear  no  change.   Helenas 

T.  6  :  367.     C.  601. 
Meet  for  love's  regal  dalmatic.     Miscon.  2  :  73.     C.  189. 
Not  love's  first  glory  but  a  sober  glow.     R.  and  B.  3:428. 

C.  582. 
Love's   overbrimming   for    self-sacrifice.      Ari.    A.    5  :  131. 

C.  641. 
Love's  corpse  lies  quiet  therefore,  Only  Love's  ghost  plays 

truant.     St.  Mart.  5  :  353.     C.  814. 
Love's  look,  gesture,  speech,  I  claim  :  Act  love,  lie  love,  all 

the  same.     Crist,  and  M.  6  :  203.     C.  915. 
Loves,     pale  loves  may  die  out  of  their  pretence  In  face  of 

mine,   shames   thrown   on   love  fall   otf.     In  a  B.  4:1 136. 

C.  366. 
Who  loves  his  kind  must  by  all  means  induce  That  kind  to  let 

his  love  play  freely.     Geo.  B.D.Q:  321.     C.  962. 
he  loves  both  old  and  young.  Able  and  weak,  affects  the  very 

brutes  And  birds.     Karshish  4  :  69.     C.  340. 
Loved.     And  so  fall  asleep,  Love,  Loved  by  thee.     Woman's 

2  :  23.     C.  171. 
We  that  had  loved  him  so,  followed  him,  honored  him.     Lost 

Z.  2  : 3.     C.  164. 
how  much  I  loved  him,  I  find  out  now  I  've  lost  him.    Waring 

2  :  270.     C.  264. 
Henceforth  be  loved  as  heart  can  love.  Or  brain  devise,  or 

hand  approve!     FligJit  2 -.303.     C.  276. 
Looked  and  loved,  learned  and  drew,  Drew  and  learned  and 

loved  again.     J.  Lee  4  :  162.     C.  376. 
I  loved,  and  was  lowly,  loved  and  aspired.  Loved,  grieving  or 

glad,  till  I  made  you  mad.      Worst  4  :  171.     C.  378. 
So  long  as  men  were  merely  weak,  not  bad,  He  loved  men. 

Balau.  4  :  289.     C.  612. 
Ah,  but  how  each  loved  each.     Crv^t.  and  M.  6  :  202.    C.  914. 
wail  —  too   late  —  Unwise  I  loved !     That 's  one  cry.     Joch. 

6  :  214.     C.  919. 


150  LOVED  — LUCRE'S 

Loved.     "  Though  I  felt,  for  this,  My  heart  break,  I  loved  on 
the  same."     Bad  Z>.  /.  6  :  394  ;  7  :  15.     C.  989. 
thus   he  loved.  Past   power  to   change,  until   his  dying-day. 
Bm.  Sig.  6  :  419  ;  7  :  71.     C.  999. 
Loveliness.     Looking  the  irresistible  loveliness  In  tears  that 
takes  man  captive,  turns.     R.  and  B.  3  :  183.     C.  487. 
free  and   flower-like   too,  with  loveliness  for  law,  And  self- 
sustainment  made  morality.     Fijine  4  :  388.     C.  705. 
Lover.     lie  looked  at  her,  as  a  lover  can.     Stat,  and  B.  2  :  322. 
C.  284. 
O  lover  of  my  life,  O  soldier-saint,  No  work  begun  shall  ever 

pause  for  death  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  277.     C.  524. 
a  lady's  true  lover,  He  holds  —  save  his  God  and  his  king  — 
none  above  her.      Which .?  G  :  400  ;  7  :  28.     C.  991. 
Lovers.     Calmer   than   lovers,   yet   more   kind   than   friends. 
Pippa  1  :  331.     C.  130. 
Such  lovers  old  are  I  and  she  :  So  it  always  was,  so  shall  ever 

be  !     De  Gm.  2  :  46.     C.  179. 
Face  to  face  the  lovers  stood  A  single  minute  and  no  more. 

Stat,  and  B.  2  :  323.     C.  284. 
In  a  minute  can  lovers  exchange  a  word  ?   Stat,  and  B.  2  :  323. 
C.  284. 
Loving.     But  for  loving,  why,  you  would  not,  Sweet,  Though 
we  prayed  you.  Paid  you,  brayed  you  In  a  mortar  —  for 
you  could  not,  Sweet !     Pretty  W.  2  :  77.     C.  191. 
loving  her  Lowers  me  down  the  bloody  slope  to  death  With 

memories.     A  Blot  2  :  173.     C.  228. 
For  the  loving  worm  within  its  clod  Were  diviner  than  a  love- 
less god.     Chrls.-Eve  4:7.     C.  318. 
LoTV.     Nor  low  i'  the  social  scale  nor  yet  too  high.  Nor  poor 
nor   richer   than   comports  with   ease.     R.    and   B.    3  :  70. 
C.  442. 
low  i'  the  scale  One  way,  have  reason,  rising  all  they  can  By 

favor  of  the  money-bag  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  74.     C.  443. 
Low  instinct,  base  pretension,  are  these  truth?     it.  and  B. 
3  :  367.     C.  558. 
Lowest.    You  choose  the  glorious  life,  and  may,  for  me  !  I  like 

the  lowest  of  life's  appetites.     R.  and  B.  3  :  398.     C.  570. 
Loyola.     There  's   Loyola   adapted   to   our  time  !     R.  and  B. 

3  :  399.     C.  570. 
Lucifer.     "Gabriel!"  cried  Lucifer  at  Eden-gate.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  15.  C.  420. 
Lucre,  lucre,  dust  o'  the  mine.  Rubbish  o'  the  rock,  some  dia- 
mond, muckworms  prize,  Some  pearl.  R.  and  B.  3  :  331. 
C.  545. 
Lucre's.  What  though  he  lured  base  hinds  by  lucre's  hope,  — 
The  only  motive  they  could  masticate.  R.  and  B.  3  :  315. 
C.  539. 


LUCK  — MAD  151 

Luck.     Beginning  life  .  .  .  with  callow  beak  Agape  for  luck, 
no  luck  had  stopped  and  stilled.     R.  and  B.  3  :  40.    C.  430. 
Here  was  the  prize  of  sin,  luck  of  a  lie  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  80. 
C.  445. 

Ludicrous.  First  the  lighter  side,  Ludicrous  face  of  things. 
R.  and  B.  3  :  15G.     C.  476. 

Lump,  there  lurks  Somewhere  in  all  of  us  a  lump  which  irks 
Somewhat  the  spriteliest-scheming  brain.  Geo.  B.  D.G  :  320. 
C.  9G2. 

Lumps.  Man  lumps  his  kind  i'  the  mass  :  God  singles  thence 
Unit  by  unit.     Camel-D.  6  :  259.     C.  937. 

Lunacy.  Enough  !  Prepare,  Such  lunes  announced,  for  down- 
right lunacy  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  329.     C.  544. 

Lure-O'wl.  A  lure-owl  posturing  to  attract  birds,  You  look 
love-lures  at  theatre  and  chiu^ch.  R.  and  B.  3 :  252. 
C.  514. 

Lust.     Lust  of  the  flesh,  lust  of  the  eye,  —  what  else  Was  he 
just   now  awake  from,  sick  and   sage.     R.   and   B.  3 :  43. 
C.  431. 
Lust  .  .  .  hell's   o^vn   blue   tint  That  gives  a  character  and 
marks  the  man.     R.  and  B.  3  :  376.     C.  561. 

Lusts,  sad  i-eview  of  an  ambitious  youth  Choked  by  vile  lusts, 
unnoticed  in  their  birth,  But  let  grow  up  and  wind  around 
a  will  Till  action  was  destroyed.     Para.  1  :  49.     C.  21. 

Luther's,  as  frees  Our  Luther's  burning  tongue  the  fettered 
soul  ?     Para.  1  :  69.     C.  28. 

Luxury.  Leave  each  mollitious  haunt  of  luxury  !  The  golden- 
garnished  silken  -  couched  alcove.  R.  and  B.  3  :  346. 
C.  550. 

Luxury's.  In  luxury's  sofa-lap  of  leather!  Dubiety  G  :  391; 
7:6.     C.  987. 

Lying,  the  old  miserable  lying  trick  Caught  from  the  liars  I 
have  lived  with.     Sours  Tr.  2  :  338.     C.  289. 

Lynx.  I  must  needs  o'  the  sudden  prove  a  lynx  And  look  the 
heart,  that  stone-wall,  through.     R.  and  B.  3  :424.    C.  580. 

Lyre.  Were  they  seven  Strings  the  lyre  possessed  ?  Oh,  and 
afterwards  eleven.     Tico  Poets  6  :  114.     C.  873. 

Lyric.  O  lyric  Love,  half  angel  and  half  bird,  And  all  a  won- 
der and  a  wild  desire.     R.  and  B.  3  :  32.     C.  427. 

Lyric  Love.  Might  mine  but  lie  outside  thine.  Lyric  Love. 
R.andB.3:^n.     C.  601. 


M 

Machinery,     machinery  Old   as   earth,  obvious   as  the    noon- 
day sun.     R.  and  B.  3 :  87.     C.  448. 
Mad.      no  more   than   the   first  mad   speedy-    Made   out   the 


152  MAD  — MAN 

speaker   mad   and   a   laughiug-stock.     R.  and  B.   3 :  224. 

C.  503. 
Mad.     Oh,  oh,  It  makes  me  mad  to  see  what  men  shall  do  And 

we  in  our  graves  !     Fra  Lippo  4  :  81.     C.  345. 
Madhouse,     he,  who  paced  the  sward.  Had  reached  the  zenith 

from  his  madhouse  cell.     Chris.  Sin.  6  :  31G.     C.  960. 
Madrid,     grave  Madrid  All  fire  and  shine.       Waring  2  :  273. 

C.  265. 
Magic,     daring  not  dispute  The  wonders  it  decries,  attributes 

them  To  magic  and  such  folly.     Para.  1:  69.     C.  28. 
Magnanimity.     Contagion  from  the  magnanimity  O'  the  man 

whose  life  lay  on  his  hand  so  light.     Balau.  4  :294.     C.  614. 
Magnates'.     Though   both   moved   in   the   regular   magnates' 

march  :  Each  must  observe  the  other's  tread  and  halt.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  87.     C.  448. 
Maiden.     Lily  of   a  maiden,  white  with  intact  leaf   Guessed 

through  the  sheath  that  saved  it  from  the  sun  ?     R.  and  B. 

3  :  76.     C.  444. 
Make-believe.     What   an  explosion,  how   the   fragments  fly 

Of  what  was  surface,  mask  and  make-believe  !     R.  and  B. 

3:417.     C.  578. 
Maketh.     AVhat  maketh  heaven,  That  maketh  hell.    Her.  Trag. 

2  :  316.     C.  281. 

Malice,     there    leered   new   triumph,   there   Scowled   the   old 
malice  in  the  visage  bad  And  black  o'  the  scamp.     R.  and 
5.  3:221.     C.  502. 
Yet  hold,  even  here  would   malice  leer  its  last,  Gurgle  its 
choked  remonstrance  :  snake,  hiss  free  !     R.  and  B.  3  :352. 
C.  552. 
"How  reconcile,"  gasps  Malice,  "that  with  this?"     R.  and 
.  B.3:  352.     C.  552. 
Foiled  oft,  starved  long,  glut  malice  for  amends  !     it.  and  B. 

3  :  372.     C.  560. 

For  how  should  malice   go  with  negligence  ?     R.  and  B. 

3  :  433.     C.  584. 
the  cold  iron  malice,  the  launched  lie  Whence  heavenly  fire 

has  -nnthered.     Ari.  A.  5: 135.     C.  642. 
truth  that  drops  disguise  And  stands  forth  grinning  malice 

which   but   now   Whined    so   contritely.      Inn   A.   5 : 297. 

C.  795. 
Malicious.     Some   old   malicious   tower,  some   obscene   tomb 

They   thought   a   temple   in   their   ignorance.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  370.     C.  559. 
Man.     Thus   far,   a   man ;   let   me    conclude,  a   man !     Para. 

1:52.     C.  22. 
The  heir  of  hopes  too  fair  to  turn  out  false,  .  .  .  man  appears 

at  last.     Para.  1:118.     C.  47. 
man,  once  descried,  imprints  forever  His  presence  on  all  life- 


MAN  153 

less  things  :  the  winds  Are  henceforth  voices,  wailing  or  a 

shout,  A  querulous  mutter  or  a  quick  gay  laugh,  Never  a 

senseless  gust  now  man  is  born.     Para.  1: 118.     C.  47. 
Man.     So,  earth  has  gained  by  one  man  the  more.     By  Fire. 

2  :  67.     C.  187. 
Standing,  as  man  now,   stately,  strong   and   wise.      Colomhe 

2  :  215.     C.  244. 
The  man  of  men,  the  spirit  of  all  flesh.  The  fiery  centre  of  an 

earthly  world  !     Colomhe  2  :  216.     C.  245. 
And  lo,  a  blade  for  a  knight's  emprise  Filled  the  fine  empty 

sheath  of  a  man.     Stat,  and  B.  2  :  332.     C.  284. 
It 's  man,  in  me,  All  your  successes  are  an  outrage  to.     Soul's 

Tr.  2  :  339.     C.  290. 
Friend,  seem  the  man  you  are  !     SouVs  Tr.  2  :  345.     C.  292. 
Thou  livest  now,  with  men  art  man  again  !      Luria  2  :  391. 

C.  310. 
Man,  .  .  .  Formed  to  rise,  reach  at,  if  not  grasp  and  gain 

The  good  beyond  him,  —  which  attempt  is  growth.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  17.     C.  421. 

A  man  of  ready  smile  and  facile  tear.  Improvised  hopes,  de- 
spairs at  nod  and  beck.     R.  and  B.  3  :  27.     C.  425. 
Man,  like  a  glass  ball  with  a  spark  a-top.     R.  and  B.  3  :  31. 

C.  426. 

a  man,  and  honest  man  beside,  And  man  of  birth  to  boot.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  34.     C.  428. 
Why  he's  a  mere  man  —  Born,  bred  and  brought  up  in  the 

usual   way.     His  mother  loves   him.     R.   and  B.  3 :  141. 

C.  470. 
I  am  alive,  am  still  a  man  With  brain  and  heart  and  tongue 

and  right-hand  too.     R.  and  B.  3  :  177.     C.  485. 
But  you,  who  are  so  quite  another  paste  Of  a  man.     it.  and 

B.  3  :  196.     C.  492. 

man, — confessed  creation's  master-stroke,  Nay,  intellectual 

glory.     R.  and  B.  3  :  291.     C.  530. 
Shall  man  prove  the  insensible,  the  block,  The  blot  o'  the  earth 

he  crawls  on  to  disgrace  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  291.     C.  530. 
As  a  mere  man  may,  with  no  special  touch  O'  the  lynx-gift  in 

each  ordinary  orb.     R.  and  B.  3  :  383.     C.  564. 
Grow  out  of  man,  Glut  the  wolf-nature,  —  what  remains  but 

grow  Into  the  man  again.     R.  and  B.  3  :  449.     C.  591. 
I  lived  and  died  a  man,  and  take  man's  chance.  Honest  and 

bold  :    right   will   be   done   to   such.      R.   and   B.   3  :  456. 

C.  594. 

A  ]Man  !  —  a  right  true   man,   however,   Whose  work  was 

worthy.     Chris.-Eve  ^:2Q.     C.  323. 
For  I,  a  man,  with  men  am  linked  And  not  a  brute  with 

brutes  ;  no  gain  That  I  experience,  must  remain  Unshared. 

Chris.-Eve  4: -.27.     C.  325. 


154 


MAN 


:46. 
908. 
:208. 


That  the 
C.  754. 

C.  917. 


Man.     the  feeling,  thinking,  acting  man.  The  man,  who  loved 
his  life  so  over-much.     Cleon  4  :  122.     C.  361. 

The  man  was  my  whole  world,  all  the  same,  With  his  flowers 
to  praise  or  his  weeds  to  blame.     J.  Lee  4  :  156.     C.  374. 

approved  A  man,  for  aye  removed  From  the  developed  brute  ; 
a  God  though  in  the  germ.     Ben  Ezra  4  :  187.     C.  384. 

more  is  not  reserved  To  man,  ^vith  soul  just  nerved  To  act  to- 
morrow what  he  learns  to-day.     Ben  Ezra  4  :  188.     C.  384. 

—  Man  is  not  God  but  hath  God's  end  to  serve,  A  master  to 
obey,  a  course  to  take.     Death  in  D.  4  :  203.     C.  390. 

Could  man  indeed  avail,  mere  praise  of  his.  To  help  by  rap- 
ture God's  own  rapture  too.  Thrill  with  a  heart's  red  tinge 
that  pure  pale  bliss  ?     Epil  Dra.  P.  4  :  260.     C.  413. 

stand  forth  all  man  and,  might  it  chance,  Somewhat  of  angel 
too  i     Fifine  4  :  415.     C.  720. 

All  folk  of  individuality  Prefer  to  be  reminded, 
shell-outside  only  harbors  man.     Red  Cott.  5 

Man  that  is  snake's  meat.     Doctor  6  :  185.     C 

mere  man  who  conceited  me  godlike.     Ixion  6 

If  gods  be  strong  and  wicked,  man,  though  weak.  May  prove 
their  match  by  willing  to  be  good.  Ari.  A.  5:109. 
C.  632. 

Poet,  remain  the  man  nor  ape  the  Muse  !  Ari.  A.  5  :228. 
C.  976. 

A  man  and  man  enough,  head-sober  and  heart-sound.  Ready 
to  hear  God's  voice,  resolute  to  obey.    Ivan  6  :  140.    C.  886. 

King  —  I  was  man.  no  more  :  what  I  recognized  faulty  I  pun- 
ished.    Ixion  6  :209.     C.  917. 

Man  henceforth  and  forever,  who  lent  from  the  glow  of  his 
nature  Warmth  to  the  cold.     Ixion  6  :210.     C.  917 

No,  be  man  and  nothing  more. 

Man  who,  as  man  conceiving 
and  deprecates,  and  loves 
C.  933. 

Man  I  am  and  man  would  be.  Love  —  merest  man  and  nothing 
more.     Epil.  Family  6  :  248.     C.  933. 

No, — man  once,  man  forever  —  man  in  soul  As  man  in  body. 
Sun  Q:2ol.     C.  934. 

man,  bound  By  man's  conditions  neither  less  nor  more.  Sun 
6:252.     C.  9M. 

Man,  with  the  narrow  mind,  must  cram  inside  His  finite  God's 
infinitude.     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  298.     C.  953. 

Man  who,  now  —  the  same  As  erst  in  Eden,  needs  that  all  he 
sees  Be  named  him.     Chria.  Sm.  6  :  315.     C,  960. 

(Man,  poor  elf.  Striving  to  match  the  finger-mark  of  Him  The 
immeasurably  matchless.)     Fr.  Fu.  G  .^^O.     C.  965. 

In  the  legend  of  man  shall  see  Writ  large  what  small  I  saw 
In  mv  life's  tale.     Rev.  6  :  435  ;  7  :  103.     C.  1005. 


Family  6  :  248.     C.  933. 
hopes  and  fears.   And  craves 
and  loathes.     Family   6  :  248. 


MAN  —  MANNERS  1  o5 

Man's.     Oh,  the  man's  thought  !  no  woman 's  such  a  fool.     In 

a  3.4:-.  13G.     C.  36G. 
Nor  aimed  at  being  just  sustained  myself  By  some  man's  soul 

—  the  weaker  woman's-want  !     Inn  A.  5  :  306.     C.  798. 
What  are  man's  pimy  members  and  as  mean  Requirements 

weighed    with    Star-King    Mushtari?       Cherries    6  :2G3. 

C.  939. 
Man's-heart.    Upon  that  broad  man's-heart  of  his,  I  go.    Luna 

2  :  366.     C.  301. 
Man's-motives.     lessened   by  admixture  sad  and  strange  Of 

mere  man's-motives.     Cherries  6  :  265.     C.  939. 
Man's-play.     'T  is  Man's-play  merely  !    Craft  foils  rectitude, 

Malignity  defeats  beneficence.     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  298.     C.  953. 
Men.     Marts,  theatres  and  wharfs  —  all  filled  with  men,  Men 

everywhere  !     Para.  1  :  56.     C.  23. 
And   the  need   of  a  world   of   men  for   me.     Parting  2:21. 

C.  170. 
The  world   is  wide  —  are  we  the  only  men  ?     Luria  2  :  384. 

C.  308. 
Men  are  men  :  why  then  need  I  say  one  word  More  than  that 

our  mere  man  —     R.  and  B.  3  :  87.     C.  448. 
Tell  me,  are  men  vinhappy,  in  some  kind  Of  mere  unhappiness 

at  being  men.     R.  and  B.  3  :216.     C.  500. 
Why,  men  —  men  and  not  boys  —  boys  and  not  babes  —  Babes 

and  not  beasts  —  beasts  and  not  stocks  and  stones  !    R.  and 

B.  3  :  229.     C.  506. 

Men  are  no  longer  men  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  288.     C.  529. 

Boys  seek  for  images  and  melody,  Men  must  have  reason  — 

so,  you  aim  at  men.     Trans.  4  :  57.     C.  335. 
even  your  prime  men  who  appraise  their  kind  Are  men  still, 

.  .  .  See   more   in   a   truth  than   the   truth's  simple    self. 

Bishop  B.  4  :  100.     C.  352. 
Men,  you  make.  By  ruling  them,  your  own  :  each  man  for  his 

own  sake  Accepts  you  as  his  guide.     Fifine  4  :  413.     C.  719. 
I  paint  men  as  they  are  —  so  runs  my  boast  —  Not  as  thev 

should  be.     Ari.  .4.5: 148.     C.  647. 
Mandeville.     keep  still  Trustful  with  —  me?  with  thee,  sage 

Mandeville.     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  302.     C.  955. 
Manhood's.     Oh,    our   manhood's   prime   vigor  !    Saul   2  :  49. 

C.  180. 

Mankind.     Whatever  be  my  chance  or  my  mischance.  What 
benefits  mankind  must  glad  me  too.     Para.  1  :83.     C.  34. 

Manner.   What  good  of  giving  knowledge  if,  because  O'  the  man- 
ner of  the  gift,  its  profit  fail  ?    Death  in  D.  4  :203.    C.  390. 

Manners.     Taught  them  good  manners  and  killed  both  at  once, 
R.  and  B.  3  :  290.     C.  529. 
'tis  manners  —  mild  But  yet  imperative   law  —  which  make 
the  man,     R.  and  B.  3  :  295.     C.  531. 


156  MANNERS  —  MARTYRDOM 

Manners.     New  climes   don't   change  old  manners.     Ari.  A. 

o  :  107.     C.  631. 
Many's.     't  is  just  the  many's  mindless  mass  That  most  needs 

helping.     Joch.  6  :  228.     C.  925. 
Mars,    nothing  mars  Work,  else  praiseworthy,  like  a  bodily  flaw 

I'  the  worker.     R.  and  B.  3  :  333.     C.  545. 
Maratta.     Cavalier  Carlo —  well,  there  's  some  excuse  For  him 

—  Maratta  who  paints    Virgins   so.      R.   and   B.   3 :  69. 

C.  441. 
Marble.     I  turned  a  half-look  from  my  pedestal  Where  I  grow 

marble.     In  a  B.'i:  140.     C.  367. 
Marching,     marching  in  marital  rectitude  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  162. 

C.  478. 
Mark.     No  lamp  will  mark  that  window  for  a  shrine,  No  tablet 

signalize  the  terrace.     R.  and  B.  3  :  371.     C.  559. 
Market-price.     Why,  worth  the  market-price,  —  now  up,  now 

down.     R.  and  B.  3  :  153.     C.  475. 
Market-time,     crammed  with  booths,  Buzzing  and  blaze,  noon- 
tide and  market-time.     R.  and  B.  3  •.2.     C.  415. 
Marred.      To  make,   you   must    be   marred.      Fifine   4  :  415. 

C.  719. 
Marriage.     We  talk  of  just  a  marriage,  if  you  please  —  The 

every-day   conditions   and   no   more.      R.  and  B.  3  :  158. 

C.  477. 
Marriage  on  earth  seems  such  a  counterfeit,  Mere  imitation  of 

the  inimitable.     R.  and  B.  3 -.21?,.     C.  525. 
"  Annul  a  marriage  ?   'T  is  impossible  !     Though  ring  about 

your  neck  be  brass  not  gold,  Needs  must  it  clasp,  gangrene 

you  all  the  same  !  "     R.  and  B.  3  :  183.     C.  487. 
no  marriage  for  superb  disdain.  Contempt  incarnate  !     Inn  A. 

5:260.     C.  780. 
Married.     Oh  married  ones,  much  rather  should  I  bid,  In  pa- 
tience all  of  ye  possess  your  souls  !      jR.  and  B.  3 :  124. 

C.  463. 
What  hath  the  married  life  but  strifes  and  plagues  For  pro- 
per dispensation  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  124.     C.  463. 
married  am  I :  Text  whejeon  friendly  censors  burst  to  preach. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  155.     C.  476. 
I  never  married  ;  wish  I  had  —  and  then  Unwish  it  :  people 

kill  their  wives,  sometimes  !     Inn  A.  5  : 266.     C.  782. 
Marry,     marrv,  drain  from  froth  to  lees  The  bitter  draught. 

Doctor  6  :  181.     C.  906. 
Martyr.     And  I  'm  at  length  A  martyr  for  the  truth  !     King 

C.  1:396.     C.  156. 
I  see  I  never  am  to  die  a  martyr.     King  C-  1:  403.     C.  159. 
The   abhorred   one  was  a  max-tyr  all  the  time.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  470.     C.  598. 
Martyrdom,     but  martyrdom  rehearsed,  But  predetermined 


MARTYRDOM  —  MATRIMONIAL  157 

saintship  for  the  sake  0'  the  mother  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  427. 

C.  582. 
Martyrdom.     Up,  then  —  earn  Albeit   no   prize  we  may  but 

martyrdom  !     Geo.  B.  D.  6  :  321.     C.  962. 
Marvel,     mind  is  nobly  fain  To  realize  the  marvel,  make  — 

for  sense  As  mind  —  the  unseen  visible.   Ber.  de  M.  6  :  301. 

C.  954. 
no  herb  But  hides  its  marvel,  peace  no  doubts  perturb  In  each 

small  mystery  of  insect  life.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  338.     C.  9G8. 
Mask.     Ask   This   rich   room    how   you   dropped   the   mask ! 

Appear.  5  :  351.     C.  814. 
Masked.     In  glided  a  masked  muffled  mystery.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  200.     C.  494. 
Mass.     A  mass  of  men,  whose  very  souls  even  now  Seem  to 

need  re-creating,  —  so  they  slink  Worm-like.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  398.     C.  570. 
And  hear  the  blessed  mutter  of  the  mass,  And  see  God  made 

and  eaten  all  day  long.     St.  Prax.  4  :  90.     C.  349. 
Master.     This  is  our  master,  famous,  calm  and  dead.     Gram. 

Fun.  2  ■.2,10.     C.  279. 
Master-mind.     Win   A   master-mind   to   serve   us   needs    we 

must.     Geo.  B.  D.6: 325.     C.  964. 
Master-stroke.     That  was  the  policy  and  master-stroke.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  15.     C.  420. 
Repair  all  losses  by  a  master-stroke.  Wipe  out  the  past,  all 

done  all  left  undone.     R.  and  B.  3  :  103.     C.  454. 
Master-touch.     History  shows  you  men  whose  master-touch 

Not  so  much  modifies  as  makes  anew.     Prince  H.  4 :  338. 

C.  684. 
Masterdom.     this  raasterdom  o'er  all  the  world  Of  one  who 

was  but  born  —  like  you,  like  me.   Imp.  A  ug.  6  :  426  ;  7  :  85. 

C.  1001. 
Mastered.     I   have   mastered   the   whole   matter  :   I  nothing 

doubt.     R.  and  5.  3  : 8.     C.  417. 
Masterful.     — one   of   no   meek   sort  But   masterful    as   he: 

man's  match  in  short  ?     Bea.  Sig.  6  :  415  ;  7 :  63.     C.  997. 
Masterpiece.     Played  I  not  off-hand  and  runningly.  Just  now, 

your  masterpiece,  hard  number  twelve  ?     Master  H.  2  :  93. 

C.  196. 
Mastery.     The  obligation  I  incurred  was  just  To  practise  mas- 
tery, prove  my  mastership.     R.  and  B.  3  :  158.     C.  477. 
Mathematics,     you    know    physics,    something    of    geology. 

Mathematics  are  your  pastime.     Toccata  2  :  36.     C.  175. 
Matter.     Soul   on   Matter   being  thrust,   Joy  comes  when   so 

much  Soul  is  wreaked  in  Time  On  Matter.     Sor.  1 :  318. 

C.  124. 
Matrimonial.     He    underwent    the   matrimonial   torch?     R- 

and  B.  3  :  282.     C.  526. 


158  MATRIMONY  — MEDICEAN 

Matrimony.     — with  a  general  sigh  At  matrimony  the  pro- 
found mistake.     R.  and  B.  3  :  91.     C.  450. 
Maundered.     Here  maundered  this  dispirited  old  age.     Balau. 

4:288.     C.  612. 
Mavvrs.     Maws  out  of  sorts  make  mouths  out  of  taste.     Epil. 

Pacch.  5  :  394.     C.  829. 
May.     Tliere  's  no  such  lovely  month  in  Rome  as  May.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  409.     C.  574. 
This  May  — what  magic  weather  !     Never  G  :235.     C.  928. 
May's.      May's   warm    slow   yellow    moonlit    summer    nights. 

P(>;5a  1:354.     C.  139. 
Mayne.     Thus  the  Mayne  glideth  Where  my  Love   ahidcth. 

Para.  1 :  111.     C.  44. 
Mean,     the  one  step  too  mean  For  him  to  take.     Sor.  1:325. 

C.  127. 
Nothing  above,  below  the  just  degree,  All  at  the  mean  where 

joy's  components  mix.     R.  and  B.  3  :  71.     C.  442. 
Means.     Means  to  an  end,  such  proofs  are  :  what  the  end  ? 

Sor.  1  :  296.     C.  115. 
Are  means  to  the  end,  themselves  in  part  the  end  ?     R.  and 

B.  3  :  16.     C.  421. 

How  often  must  I  round  thee  in  the  ears  —  All  means  are 

lawful  to  a  lawful  end  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  308.     C.  536. 
permit  the  end  —  permit  therewith  Means  to  the  end!     R. 

and  B.  3:331.     C.  545. 
Use  every  means.  Since  means  to  the  end  are  lawful !     R. 

and  B.  3  :  335.     C.  546. 
used,  in  passionate  poor  strife,  All  the  means  that  seemed  to 

promise  any  aid.     La  S.  6  :  58.     C.  851. 
Strength,  beauty  are  the  means  :  ignore  their  end  ?     Chris. 

5m.  6:317.     C.  961. 
—  Here  trip  you,  that  —  your  aim  allowed  as  right  —  Your 

means  thereto  were  wrong.     Geo.  B.  D.  6  :  320.     C.  962. 
Meaning.      Born   with   a   meaning,   changed    by   mouth   and 

mouth  That  mix  it  in  a  sneer  or  smile.     R.  and  B.  3  :  267. 

C.  520. 

Meanness,     the  incarnate  meanness,  cheat  and  spy.  Mean  to 

the  marrow  of  him.     R.  and  B.  3  :  202.     C.  495. 
Measure.     Full   measure,  pressed   down,  running  over   now ! 

R.  and  B.  3  :  228.     C.  505. 
Meat.     A  meal  all  meat  henceforth,  no  garnishry.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  118.     C.  461. 
Meddling,     outside  meddling,   the   unskilled  Interposition  of 

such   fools   as   press    Out   of   their  province.     R.   and  B. 

3  : 352.     C.  552. 
Medicean.      Hold,    as   it   were,    a   deprecating   hand,  Statu- 

esquely,  in  the  Medicean  mode.  Before  some  shame  which 

modesty  would  veil  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  338.     C.  647. 


MEDIOCRITY  — MENACE  159 

Mediocrity.     Safe   mediocrity  had  scorned  the  Inre   Of  now 

too   much   and    now   too   little    cost.       Chris.  Sin.   6 :  312. 

C.  959. 
mediocrity  Turns  on  itself  the  self-transforming  eye.     Bea. 

Skj.  6  :  413  ;  7  :  59.     C.  996. 
Medium-nature.       That 's     in    the    *  medium '  -  nature,    thus 

they  're    made,   Vain    and    vindictive,   cowards,   prone   to 

scratch.     Sludge  4  :  235.     C.  403. 
Meet.     We  shall  not  meet  in  this  world  nor  the  next,  But 

where  will  God  be  absent  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  276.     C.  524. 
There  may  we  four  meet,  praise  fortune  just  as  now,  another 

year  !     La  S.G:  56.     C.  850. 
Melcombe.     Ah,  George  Bubb  Dodington  Lord  Melcombe,  — 

no,  Yours  was  the  wrong  way  !    Geo.  B.  D.  6  :  319.     C.  961. 
Memory,     if   you   have   been   wise   enough   To  cleanse  your 

memory  of  such  matters.     Para.  1:07.     C.  27. 
make  a  riddance  of  the  drench  Of  minutes  with  a  memory  in 

each.     R.  and  B.  3  :  215.     C.  500. 
Does  memory  haunt  vour  pillow  ?     Not  a  whit.     R.  and  B. 

3  : 4.53.     C.  592. 
So  did  this  old  woe  fade  from  memory.     R.  and  B.  3  :  476. 

C.  001. 
Majestic  on  the  stage  of  memory.     Ari.  A.  5  :103.     C.  630. 
I  kept  my  memory  down  by  stress  Of  daily  work.     Forgiv. 

5  :  367.     C.  820. 
And  one  vivacious  memory  gnawing  there  As  when  a  corpse 

is  coffined  with  a  snake.     Cenciaja  5  :  373.     C.  822. 
Be  this,  sad  yet  sweet,  the  sole  Memory  evoked  from  slum- 
ber !     La'S.Q:  75.     C.  859. 
'Nay,  but  our  memory  fades  And  leaves  the  past  unsullied  ! ' 

Does  it  so  ?     Bean-St.  6  :  272.     C.  942. 
What  old-world  work  proved  forage  for  the  bill  Of  memory 

the  far-flyer  ?     Chas.  A.  6  :  355.     C.  975. 
ah,  memory,  how  it  haunts  !     Founder  6  :  387.     C.  947. 
Memories,     trace  by  trace  Old  memories  reappear,  old  truth 

returns.     Luria  2  :  403.     C.  315. 
Adjured  by  mumping  memories  of  the  past.    R.  and  B.  3  :445. 

C.  589. 
I  will  match  Departed  love  with  love,  attach  Old  memories  to 

new  dreams.     Eas.-Day  4  :  53.     C.  334. 
Thus   old   memories   mar    the   actual   triimiph.     One    Word 

4 : 126.     C.  362. 
Spoil-laden  Sonl,  how   should   such  memories  sleep  ?     Epil. 

Plot-C.6:2Q7.     C.  940. 
—  back,  memories  that  intrude  !  Make,  Love,  the  universe  our 

solitude.     Epil.  Plot-C.  6  :  267.     C.  940. 
Menace.     Who  maketh   God's  menace  an  idle  word  ?     Her. 

Trag.  2  :  315.     C.  281. 


160  MEND  —  MILK-SOP 

Mend,     further  effort  To  mend  and  patch  what 's  marred  be- 
yond repairing,  As  useless.     Para.  1  :  72.     C.  29. 
Mercy.      Mercy   is   safe   and  graceful.      R.   and   B.   3 :  401. 

C.  571. 
Christ   rises  !     Mercy  every  way  Is  infinite,  —  and  who  can 

say  ?     Eas.-Day  4  :  56.     C.  335. 
And  "  Mercy  !  "  cried  each  —  "  if  I  tell  the  truth  Of  a  passage 

in  my  youth  !  "     Adam  G  :  207.     C.  910. 
Seeking   corroboration  from  thy  nod  Who  art  all  justice  — 

which  means  mercy  too.     R.  and  B.  3  :  311.     C.  537. 
Let  mercy  rather  pile  up  pain  on  pain  Till  the  flesh  expiate 

what  the  soul  pays  else  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  399.     C.  571. 
I   saw  my  crowning  mercy  :  all  have   such.  Could  they  but 

see  !     Sludfie  4  :  244.     C.  407. 
A  mercy  of  Nature's  contriving.     Don.  6  :  196.     C.  912. 
Merciful.     As   you  hope  grace  and  pardon  in  your  need,  Be 

merciful  to  this  most  wretched  man.     Straf.  1  :  187.    C.  72. 
Not    me  —  to     him,   O    God,   be    merciful !      Pippa  1 :  339. 

C.  133. 
Merely.     Merely   an   earth   to   cleave,  a  sea  to  part.     Pippa 

1  :  349.     C.  137. 
Merit,     patient  merit  Obscured  awhile  by  flashy  tricks.     Para. 

1  :  88.     C.  35. 
Merry-thought,     the    Merry-thought,  in  memory  of  the  fact 

That  to  keep  wide  awake  is  man's  best  dream.     R.  and  B. 

3:344.     C.  550. 
Message.      Writing   God's   message   plain   in   mortal   words. 

Luria  2  :  402.     C.  315. 
Messenger.     As  if  God's  messenger  through   the  close  wood 

screen   Plunged  and  replunged  his  weapon  at   a  venture. 

Pippa  1  :  337.     C.  132. 
Metamorphosis.      Where   is   the  gloriously-decisive   change, 

Metamorphosis  the  immeasurable.    R.  and  B.  3  :  392.    C.  568. 
Mettle.     Thou  didst  push  forward  and  show  mettle,  shame  The 

laggards,  and  retrieve  the  day.     it.  and  B.  3  :  383.    C.  564. 
Middle,   gay  And  galliard,  of  the  modest  middle  class.    R.  and 

B.  3  :  37.     C.  429. 
Who  can  be  absolute  for  either  side  ?     A  middle  course  is 

happily  open  yet.     R.  and  B.  3  :  98.     C.  453. 
Midnight.     At  the  midnight  in  the  silence  of  the  sleep-time. 

Epd.  4.  6  :  440  ;  7  :  113.     C.  1007. 
Might.     I  judge  people  by  what  they  might  be,  —  not  are,  nor 

will  be.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  353.     C.  296. 
Milk.     Since  milk,  though  spilt  and  spoilt,  does  marble  good, 

Better  we  down  on  knees  and  scrub  the  floor.     R.  and  B. 

3 : 248.     C.  513. 
Milk-sop.     Never,  if   you  will   credit  me,  did  there  exist  so 

poor-spirited  a  milk-sop.     SouVs  Tr.  2  :  347.     C.  293. 


^1 

J 


MILL  — MINE  161 

Mill.     Earth 's  a  mill  where  we  grind  and  wear  mufflers.   Pacch. 

5  :  327.     C.  805. 
Milsaud.     Milsaud,  who  makest  warm  my  wintry  world,  And 

wise  my  heaven.     Red  Cott.  o  :  68.     C.  762. 
Mimetic  Art.     Prejudice  Defames  Mimetic  Art  :  be  yours  to 

prove  That  gold  and  dross  may  meet  and  never  mix,  Pu- 
rity plunge  in  pitch  yet  soil  no  plume  !     Red  Cott.  5  :  36. 

C.  750. 
Mimic.     Mimic   the  tetchy  humor,  furtive  glance,  And  brow 

where  half  was  furious,  half  fatigued.     R.  and  B.  3  :  144. 

C.  471. 
Mind,     mind  is  nothing  but  disease,  And  natural  health  is  igno- 
rance.    Para.  1  :  92.     C.  37. 
too   much   of   mere   legs-and-arms    Obstructs   the   mind  so  ! 

Match   these   with   their   like  :    Match   mind   with   mind  ! 

Colombe  2  :  201.     C.  239. 
Mind  knew  its  own  mind  :  but  when  mind  must  speak,  .  .  . 

There  came   the  blunder  incident   to   words.     R.  and   B. 

3:117.     C.  460. 
To  settle  and  suit  her  fresh  and  plastic  mind  To  the  novel, 

not  disadvantageous  mould  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  155.     C.  476. 
Man's  mind,  what  is  it  but  a  convex  glass  Wherein  are  gath- 
ered all  the  scattered  points.     R.  and  B.  3  :  385.     C.  565. 
Mind   is  not  matter  nor  from  matter,   but  Above,     it.  and 

5.3:386.     C.  565. 
Mind,  the  mind.  So  miserably  cast  behind,  To  gain  what  had 

been  wisely  lost !     Eas.-Day  4  :  52.     C.  334. 
Mind  is  best  —  I  will  seize  mind,  forego  the  rest.     Eas.-Day 

4:52.     C.  334. 
Had   you,  .  .  .  but   brought   a  mind  !     Some   women   do  so. 

Andrea  4: -.So.     C.  347. 
Our  mind  receives  but  what  it  holds,  no  more.     Death  in  D. 

4  :  199.     C.  389. 
And  with  the  low  strife  came  the  little  mind.     Balau.  4  :  296. 

C.  615. 
"Mind"  —  Something  not  Matter-^"  Soul,"  who  seeks  shall 

find   Distinct  beneath   that   something.     Chas.   A.   6:357. 

C.  976. 
Man  boasts  mind.     Bea.  Sig.  6  :  415  ;  7  :  62.     C.  997. 
Miuds.     Is  it  not  so  With  the  minds  of  men  ?     The  level  and 

low.     /.  Lee  4  :  158.     C.  374. 
And  pray  how  many  folk  have  minds  can  see  ?     Prince  H. 

4  :  333.     C.  682. 
All  men  are  men  :  I  would  all  minds  were  minds  !   Jocli.  6  :  228. 

C.  925. 
Mine,     every  hour  I  would  make  mine,  and  die.     Pan.  1  :  13. 

C.  7. 
every  joy  I  would  make  mine,  and  die.     Pau.  1 :  13.* 


162 


MINE— MISERY 


Mine.     Her  soul's  mine:  and  thus,  grown  perfect,  I  shall  pass 

my  life's  rcniiiinder.     Crist.  2  :  19.     C.  170. 
Once  the  verse-book  laid  on  shelf.  The  picture  turned  to  wall, 

the  music  lied  from  ear,  —  Each  beauty,  born  of  each,  grows 

clearer  and  more  clear,  Mine  henceforth,  ever  mine  !    Fifine 

4:400.     C.  711. 
Minster,     a  grim  town  Whose  cramped  ill-featured  streets  hud- 
dled about  The  minster  for  protection.     Sor.  1  :  258.    C.  100. 
Minute.     Is  it  true  that  we  are  now,  and  shall  be  hereafter, 

But  what  and  where  depend  on  life's  minute  ?     Old  Pict. 

2:40.     C.  177. 
out  of  all  the  blaze  of  life,  On  the  best  minute  of  his  brightest 

day.     Liiria  2  :  3G3.     C.  300. 
There  's    but  a  minute  betwixt  this  and  then  :  So,  quick,  be 

sorry  since  it  saves  my  soul !     B.  and  B.  3  :  414.     C.  576. 
the  minute  of  trivial  wi'ong,  Nor  the  other  hours  are  able  to 

save.     Worst  ^-.111.     C.  378. 
Making   the   most   o'  the  minute,  that   the  soul   And   body, 

strained  to  height  a  minute  since,  Might  lie  relaxed  in  joy. 

Balau.  4  :  305.     C.  618. 
Minutes.      Fugitive  as   precious  —  Minutes    which    passed,  ^- 

return,  remain  !     Specul.  6  :  394  ;  7  :  13.     C.  988. 
Minuteness,     the  fellow  lay  safe  As  his  mates  do,  the  midge 

and  the  nit,  —  Through  minuteness,  to  wit.     Instans  2  :  241. 

C.  255. 
the  minimized  Minuteness  fancy  may  conceive.    Fr.  Fu.  6  :  334. 

C.  907. 
Miracles.     How  pointless  proves  the  sneer  at  miracles  !     Red 

Cott.  5  :  13.     C.  741. 
Your  miracles  are  grown  our  commonplace.     Red  Cott.  5  :  78. 

C.  766. 
Mire.     But  'ware  man's  footstep,  would  it  traverse  mire  Un- 
tainted !   Mire  is  safe  for  worms  that  crawl.    Ari.  A.B  :  130. 

C.  640. 
Mirrors.     'Neath  waxlight  in  a  glorified  saloon  Where  mirrors 

multiply  the  girandole.     B.  and  B.  3  :  22.     C.  423. 
Mirth.     Why  does  the  mirth   hang  fire  and  miss   the  smile  ? 

B.  and  B.  3  :  190.     C.  490. 
Misapprehensiveness.    Gently,  O  mother,  judge  men  —  whose 

mistake  Is  iu  the  mere  misapprehensiveness  !     B.  aiid  B. 

3  : 3.54.     C.  553. 
Miscalculation.     Miscalculation  has  its  consequence.     B.  arid 

B.  3  :  429.     C.  583. 
Mischief-making.     But  one  with  mischief-making  mouth  and 

eye.     B.  and  B.  3  :  246.     C.  512. 
Misconception.     Used  to  such  misconception  day  by  day  And 

broken-in  to  bear.     i?.  awZ  5.  3  :  260.     C.  517. 
Misery,      poor   Misery  ...  is  fain  upgather,  .  .  .  The  faint 

remainder  of  some  worn-out  smile.     Sor.  1  :  266.     C.  103. 


•  MISERY  — MOB  163 

Misery.  The  misery  grew  aji^ain  about  her  mouth,  The  eyes 
buruecl  up  from  faiutness,  like  tiie  fawn's.  R.  and  B.  3  :  217. 
C.  501. 

Mere  misery,  vmcler  human  schemes,  Becomes,  regarded  by 
the  light  Of  love,  as  very  near  or  quite  As  good  a  gift  as 
joy  before.     Chris.-Eve  4  :  36.     C.  328. 

So  Misery  coimselled  the  craven.     ParcA.  5  :  325.     C.  805. 

Life  's  mixed  With  misery,  yet  we  live  —  must  live.  Ivan 
6  :  137.    C.  884. 

neither  catch  nor  give  again  Jov's  plague,  but  live  in  right- 
eous misery  ?     Two  Cam.  6  :  2(32.     C.  938. 
Misfortune.    Hardly  misfortune,  and  no  fault  at  all.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  188.     C.  489. 

Misgive.      Wherefore  should    mind  misgive,  heart   hesitate  ? 

R.and  B.2>:?>1^.     C.  560. 
Misguided.     — Misguided  ones  wlio  gave  society  the  slip,  And 

find   too   late   how  boon  a  parent   they  despised.      F'lfine 

4  :  385.     C.  703. 

Misguidedly.     But  a  poor  hard-pressed  all-bewildered  thing, 

Has  rushed  so  far,  misguidedly  perhaps.     R.  and  B.  3  :  341. 

C.  548. 
Miskno'wn.     What  he  considers  that  he  knows  to-day.  Come 

but  to-morrow,  he  will  find  misknown.     Death  in  D.  4  :  204. 

C.  391. 
Miss,     miss  one  promise-streak,  One   doubtful   birth  of  dawn 

crepuscular,   One   dew-drop  comfort.     R.   and   B.  3 :  294. 

C.  531. 
Missed.     Yet  one  thing,  one,  in  my  soul's  full  scope.  Either  I 

missed  or  itself  missed  me.     Evelyn  2  :  25.     C.  171. 
Mist.     The  mist    from  other  breath  fond  mouths  have  made. 

About   a   lustrous   and   pellucid   soul.      R.  and  B.  3  :  258. 

C.  517. 
Mistake.     I  am  one  huge  and  sheer  mistake,  —  whose  fault  ? 

Not  mine  at  least,  who  did  not  make  myself !     R.  and  B. 

3  :  424.     C.  581. 
She  bound  again  the  broken  self-respect.  She  picked  out  the 

true  meaning  from  mistake.     Red  Cott.  5  :  93.     C.  771. 
How  singularly  may  young  men  mistake  !     Red  Cott.  5  :  34. 

C.  749. 
Mistrust.     Why  ever  make  man's  good  distinct  from  God's, 

Or,  finding  they  are  one,  why  dare  mistrust?     Para.  1  :  45. 

C.  19. 
Mixed.    Sadly  mixed  natures  :  self-indulgent, — yet  Self-sacri- 
ficing too.     R.  and  B.  3  :  383.     C.  564. 
Mob.     Courting  the  approbation  of  no  mob.     R.  and  B.  3  :  22. 

C.  423. 
The  mob,  —  now,  that 's  just  how  the  error  comes  !     Bethink 

you   that  you  have   to  deal  with  plebs.     R.  and  B.  3  :  107. 

C.  456. 


164  MOCKERY  — MONEY        * 

Mockery,     the  mockery  again  laughs  out  At  hollow  praises, 

smiles  allied  to  sneers.     Pau.  1  :  13.     C.  7. 
the  mockery  again  laughed  out  At  hollow  praises,  and  smiles 

almost  sneers.     Pau.  1  :  13.* 
Modes.      After    how   many   modes,  .  .  .  Does  the   self-same 

weary  thing  take  place  ?     Chris. -Eve  4:7.     C.  318. 
Model,     man's   mass   remains,  —  Keep  but  God's  model  safe, 

new   men   will    rise   To   take   its   mould.      Luria   2 :  404. 

C.  315. 
Models,     men  that  every  virtue  decks,  And  women  models  of 

their  sex.     Respecta.  2  :  79.     C.  191. 
those  who  live  as  models  for  the  mass  Are  singly  of  more 

value  than  they  all.     Luria  2  :  403.     C.  315. 
Modulation.     No  lure  Of   novel  modulation  pricked  the  flat 

Forthright  persisting  melody.     Chas.  A.  6  :355.     C.  975. 
Molehill,     and  a  molehill  serves  Much  as  a  mountain  of  offence 

this  way.     R.  and  B.  3  :  101.     C.  454. 
Moli^re's.     AVould   Moli^re's   self  wish  more   than  hear  such 

man  Call,  claim  such  woman  for  his  own,  his  wife.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  222.     C.  503. 

Molinists.     'T  was  he  who  first  bade  leave  those  souls  in  peace, 
Those  Jansenists,  re-nicknamed  Molinists.     R.  and  B.  3  :  8. 

C.  417. 

Moment.    This  moment 's  the  great  moment  of  all  time.    Straf. 
1 :  163.     C.  62. 
There 's  man's  one  moment :  this  is  yours  !     King  C.  1  :  410. 

C.  162. 
Oh  moment,  one  and  infinite  !     By  Fire.2  :  64.     C.  187. 
one   moment   knelled   the  woe  of   years.     Childe  R.  2  :  336. 

C.  289. 
Life  has  worth  incalculable,  every  moment  that  he  spends  So 

much  gain  or  loss.     La  S.  6  :  70.     C.  856. 
Out  of   your  whole  life  give  but  a  moment !     Noio  6  :  392 ; 
7:8.     C.  988. 
Moment's,    this  moment's  me  and  mine.  Shows  me  what  is,  per- 
mits me  to  divine  What  shall  be.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  337.     C.  968. 
Moments.     Turn  these  few  fleeting  moments  to  account !  'Tis 
just  as  though  it  were  a  death.     King  V.  1 :  389.     C.  153. 
moments.  Sure   though  seldom  .  .  .  When  the   spirit's  true 

endowments  Stand  out  plainly.     Crist.  2  :  18.     C.  169. 
Precipitate  no  minim  of  the  mass  O'  the  all-so  precious  mo- 
ments of  thy  life.     R.  and  B.  3  :  311.     C.  537. 
Monarch.     What,  anti-Cffisar,  monarch  in  the  mud.    Imp.  Aug. 

6: 427;  7:  86.     C.  1002. 
Money.     Had  I  but  plenty  of  money,  money  enough  and  to 
spare.     Up  —  Down  2  :  32.     C.  174, 
Why,  with  beauty,  needs  there  money  be,  Love  with  liking  ? 
Pretty  W.  2  :  78.     C.  191. 


MONEY  — MORE  165 

Money.     What  magic  mitigates  Each  plague  of  travel  .  .  . 
^Nloney,  sweet  Sirs  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  334.     C.  546. 
what  titter  use  Was  ever  husband's  money  destined  to  ?     R. 

and  B.  3  :  334.     C.  546. 
All  is  the  lust  for  money  :  to  get  gold,  —  Why,  lie,  rob,  if  it 

must  be,  murder  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  368.     C.  558. 
Money,  earth's  trash  and  heaven's  affront  ?    Gold  Hair  4  :  168. 

C.  378. 
For  instance,  men  love  money  —  that,  you  know  —  And  what 

men  do  to  gain  it.     Sludge  4  :  224.     C.  398. 

little  of  incumbrance  in  his  path,  Which  money  kicks  aside, 

would  lie  there  long.     Red  Cott.  5  :  43.     C.  752. 

Money-making.     Quiet  slow  sure  money-making  proves   the 

matter's  very  root,  —  Need  for  body.    La  S.  6  :57.    C  851. 

Monkeyed.    Monkeyed  our  Great  and  Dead  to  heart's  content. 

J W.  .4.5:112.     C.  633. 
Monopoly.     I  had  not  the  monopoly  of  fools.     Para.  1 :  89. 

C.  36. 
Monstr'.    Monstr'-inform'-ingens-horrend-ous  Demoniaco-sera- 

phic.      Waring  2  :  271.     C.  265. 
Monument,     let   his   types  secure  A  deathless  monument   to 

after-time.     Para.  1  :  82.     C.  33. 
Moon,    any  meagre  and  discolored  moon.    Sor.  1  :  281.    C.  109. 
Do  I  carry  the  moon  in  my  pocket  ?   Master  H.  2  :  96.    C.  197. 
A   moon   made   like   a   face  with   certain   spots   Multiform, 

manifold,  and  menacing.     Karshish  4  :  70.     C.  340. 
The  comfort  thou  hast  caused  mankind,  God's  moon  !   In  a  B. 

4  :  145.     C.  369. 
like  a  moon  Outbreaking  from  a  cloud,  to  put  harsh  things  in 

tune.     Fijine  4 :  389.     C.  705. 
that  pale  soft  sweet  disempassioned  moon.     Numph.  5  :  348. 

C.  813. 
the  moon  Calm,  clear,  convincingly  herself  once  more  !     Dan. 
Bar.  6  :  310.     C.  958. 
Moon's,     the    sky  Received  at   once  the  full  fruition  Of  the 
moon's  consummate  apparition.     Chris.-Eve  4:9.     C.  319. 
as  when  the  moon's  might  frees  a  space  from  cloud  —  Irides- 
cent splendors.     Epil.  Fer.  6  :  283.     C.  946. 
Moral.     The  moral  sense   grows  but  by  exercise.     R.   and  B. 
3  :  387.     C.  566. 
set  to  make  A  fairer  moral  world  than  this  he  finds.     R.  and 
B.  3  :  387.     C.  566. 
Morality.     Morality  exjjosed  the  Gorgon  shield  !    Morality  and 
Religion  conquer  me.     R.  and  B.  3  :  415.     C.  577. 
There  sits  Moralitv,  demure  behind  her  stall.  Dealing  out  life 
and  death.     Fijine  4  :  434.     C.  730. 
More.     Oh,  the   little   more,  and  how  much  it  is !     By  Fire. 
2  :  65.     C.  187. 


166  MORE  — MOTHER'S 

More.     Man  might  live  at  first  The  animal  life  :  but  is  there 

nothing  more  ?     Cleon  4  :  119.     C.  360. 
Morgue.     Only  the  Doric  little  Morgue  !     App.  Fail.  4 :  257. 

C.  412. 
Morn.     See,  morn  at  length.     The  heavy  darkness  seems  Di- 
luted,   gray   and   clear   without  the   stars.      Para.  1 :  84. 

C.  34. 
Then  just  two  hours,  and  that  is  morn.     In  Three  D.  2  :  82, 

C.  192. 
Let  the  midnight  end  !  'T  is  morn  approaches  !     Luria  2  :  404. 

C.  31G. 
Morn  is  breaking  there  —  The  granite  ridge  pricks  through  the 

mist,  turns  gold  As  wrong  turns  right.     Ger.  de  L.  6  :  348. 

C.  972, 
Morning.     Morning  ?   It  seems  to  me  a  night  with  a  sun  added. 

Pippa  1  :  333.     C.  131. 
Morning-star.     The  gift  of  the  morning-star  !     Have  I  God's 

gift  Of  the  morning-star  ?     Pippa  1  :  355.     C.  140. 
Morning-stars.     When  all  the   morning-stars   together  sang. 

Helen's  T.  6  :  387.     C.  601. 
Morning's.     Look  where  heaven  has  clapped  Morning's  extin- 
guisher —  yon  ray-shot  robe  Of  sun-threads.     Joch.  6  :  215. 

C.  920. 
Mortal.     No  mere  mortal  has  a  right  To  carry  that  exalted 

air.     Pippa  1  :  365.     C.  144. 
opine  What 's  inside  me  mean  and  mortal !     At  the  M.  5  :  333. 

C.  808. 
Mortifying.     A  plaguy  cast,  a  mortifying  stroke.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  284.     C.  527. 
Moses.     Moses    the    Meek   was   thirty   cubits    high.      Moses 

6  :  234.     C.  927. 
Moss,     patches  where  some  leanness  of  the  soil's  Broke  into 

moss  or  substances  like  boils.     Childe  R.  2  :  334.     C.  288. 
narrow  ways  are  well  to  tread  When  there  's  moss  beneath 

the  footstep.     La  S.Q,:  67.     C.  855. 
Motes,     marched  a  myriad  merry  motes.     R.  and  B.  3  :  264. 

C.  519. 
Moth.     Where  is  the  matter  of  one  moth  the  more  Singed  iu 

the  candle,  at  a  summer's  end?     Luria  2  :383.     C.  307. 
Moth-eaten,     a  blind  moth-eaten  law  !     Straf.  1  :  171.     C.  65. 
Moth's.     The  moth's  kiss,  first  !     Gondola  2  :  264.     C.  262. 
Mother,     a  grav  mother  with  a  monkey-mien,  MopjDing  and 

mowing.     R.  and  B.  3  :  13.     C.  419. 
Mother's.     If  I  only  knew  What  was  my  mother's  face  —  my 

father,  too  !     Pippa  1  :  331.     C.  130. 
lend  a  look  of  youth  To  the  mother's  face  grown  meagre. 

R.andB.Z:^.     C.  430. 


MOTHERHOOD  —  MULCT  167 

Motherhood,     found  by  chance  ]\Iotlierliood  like  a  jewel   in 

the  muck.     R.  and  B.  3  :  45.     C.  432. 
I  think,  Womanliness  means  only  motherhood;  All  love  begins 

and  ends  there.     Inn  A.  5  :30(3.     C.  798. 
Because  of  motherliood,  each  male  Yields  to  his  partner  place, 

sinks  proudly  in  the  scale.     Imn  6  :  140.     C.  88G. 
Motionless.      Motionless    till   the    authoritative    word    Pro- 
nounced amercement.     R.  and  B.  3  :  167.     C.  481. 
Motives.      Motives,    seek     You    virtuous     people,    motives ! 

King  C.  1  :  393.     C.  155. 
We   must  translate  our   motives    like   our   speech,  Into  the 

lower   phrase   that   suits   the    seuse.      R.    and   B.    3 :  312. 

C.  538. 
Motor.     A  feathered  parallel  to  what  we  find  The  secret  motor 

of  some  mighty  mind.     6r'co.  iJ.  Z>.  6  :320.     C.  961. 
Mount.     The  pattern  on  the  Mount  subsists  no  more,  Seemed 

awhile,  then  returned  to  nothingness.     Death  in  D.  4  :  205. 

C.  391. 
This  imports  solely,  man  should  mount  on  each  New  height 

in  view.     Death  in  D.  4  :  200.     C.  389. 
Mounted,     the  better  nature,  fresh-inspired.  Mounted  above 

me  to  its  proper  place  !     Luria  2  :  390.     C.  310. 
Mouth,     mouth  scarce  able  to  afPord  Suppression  of  the  glee, 

that    pursed    and    scored    Its    edge.       Childe   R.    2 :  330. 

C.  287. 
Like  a  distorted  mouth  that  splits  its  rim  Gaping  at  death. 

Childe  R.  2  :  335.     C.  288. 
Such  a  funny  mouth,  for  it  would  not  shut.      Too  Late  4  :  181. 

C.  382. 
Let  my  face  rest  from   every  wT-inkle  wreathed  Smile-like 

about  the  mouth,     Forgiv.  5  :  362.     C.  818. 
Mouth's.     Now,  the  prim  pursed-up  mouth's  protruded  lips. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  429.     C.  582. 
the    pursed     mouth's    pout    Aggressive.      Ari.    A.    5:113. 

C.  634. 
Mountains.     And   God's   own   profound  Was  above  me,  and 

round  me  the  mountains.  And  under,  the  sea.     Englishm. 

2  :  260.     C.  261. 
Oh,   those   mountains,    their   infinite  movement  !     Englishm. 

2  :  261.     C.  261. 
Movement.      played    through    that   movement,   you    prefer, 

Where   dance   and    shufHe   past,  —  he    scolding  while  she 

pouts  —     Fifine  4  :  425.     C.  725. 
Muck.     Choose'muck  for  gold  ?     Dan.  Bar.  6  :308.     C.  957. 
Mud.     (mud  Needs  must  pair  off  with  mud,  and  filth  with 

filth.)     R.  and  B.  3  :  159.     C.  478. 
Mulct.     Men  mulct  the  wiser  manhood,  and  suspect  No  veri- 
table star  swims  out  of  cloud.     R.  and  B.  3  :  381.     C.  563. 


168  MULCT  — MUSIC 

Mulct.     The  jest  is  grim  :  The  man  will  mulct  you  —  for  amer- 
cing him  ?     Dan.  Bar.  6  :  305.     C.  95G. 
Mule,     trod  my  mule  with  the  caution  Of  gleaners  .  .  .  foot 

after  foot  like  a  lady.     EnffUshm.  2  :2G0.     C.  2G1. 
Multitude.     So  the  few  famous  men  of  old  combined,  And  let 
the  multitude  rise  underneath,  And  reach  them  and  unite. 
Luria  2  :  393.     C.  311. 
out  o'  the  way  O'  the  motley  merchandizing  multitude.     R. 

and  B.  3:21.     C.  422. 
Give  me  real  intellect  to  reason  with,  No  multitude,  no  entity 
that  apes  One  wise  man,  being  but  a  million  fools  !     Prince 
H.  4  :  370.     C.  697. 
Therefore  in   dealing  with   King   Multitude,   Club-drub  the 

callous  numskulls  !     Ari.  A.  o  :  170.     C.  656. 
freelier  breathe  Just  that  the  multitude  which  gasps  beneath 
May  reach  the  level.     Geo.  B.  D.  G  :  321.     C.  962. 
Mumble.     But  why  be  forced  to  mumble  under  breath  What 
soon   shall  be  acknowledged  as   plain   fact  —     R.  and  B. 

3  :  400.     C.  571. 

Murder.     Are   veritably  priests,  protected    each   May  do   his 

murder  in  the  Church's  pale.     R.  and  B.  3  :  .366.     C.  557. 
Murder-case.     Print  three-fifths,  written  supplement  the  rest. 

...  A  Roman  murder-case.     R.  and  B.  3:3.     C.  415. 
Murderer.     O'erfrothed    him   with   such   foam   of   murderer, 

Thief,   pandar  —  that   the   popular   tide  soon   turned.     R. 

andB.  3: 56.     C.  436. 
Mushrooms.     Chill  mushrooms  colored  like  a  corpse's  cheek. 

Para.  1 :  73.     C.  30. 
Music,     music  which  is  earnest  of  a  heaven.  Seeing  we  know 

emotions  strange  by  it.     Pau.  1:9.     C.  5. 
music,  my  life,  Nourished  me  more  than  ever.     Pau.  1  :  14. 

C.  7. 
music,  my  life,  I  nourished  more  than  ever.     Pau.  1 :  14.* 
music  beat  her  angel  wings  !     Druses  2  :  112.     C.  203. 
But  in  music  we  know  how  fashions  end  !     Last  Ride  2  :  281. 

C.  268. 
music  seemed   Always   to   hover   just   above   her   lips,    Xot 

settle,  —  break   a   sUence    music  too.      R.  and  B.  3  :  215. 

C.  500. 
So,  note  by  note,  bring  music  from  your  mind,  Deeper  than 

ever  e'en  Beethoven  dived.     R.  and  B.  3  :  477.     C.  601. 
Are  music  sent  up  to  God  by  the  lover  and  the  bard.     Abt 

V.  4  :  184.     C.  383. 
The   music,  like   a  fountain's   sickening  pulse.   Subsided  on 

itself.     Epilogue  4  :  200.     C.  413. 
who  hears  music,  feels  his  solitude  Peopled  at  once.     Balau. 

4  :  270.     C.  605. 

Ah,  Music,  wouldst  thou  help  !     Fijijie  4  :  408.     C.  715. 


MUSIC  — MYTH  169 

Music,  yearnings  wrought  Up  with  thy  fine  free  force,  O  Music, 
that  canst  thrid,  Electrically  win  a  passage.  Fijine  4  :  408. 
C.  716. 
inspect  this  quartet-score  !  Got  long  past  melody,  no  word 
has  Music  more  To  say  to  mortal  man  !  Fijine  4  :  434. 
C.  730. 
I  soon  was  far  to  fetch  —  Gone  off  in  company  with  Music ! 

Fijine  ^-A^G.     C.  726. 
mincing   music,   turn,   trill,   tweedle-trash.      Ari.  A.  5:124. 

C.  638. 
—  world-wide  heaven-high  sea  where  music  slept  or  surged. 

ia5.  6:67.     C.  855. 
There  is  no  truer  truth  obtainable  By  Mau  than  comes   of 

music.     Chas.  A.  6  :357.     C.  976. 
How  we  Feel,  hard  and  fast  as  what  we  Know  —  This  were 
the   prize    and    is   the    puzzle !  —  Music   essays   to   solve. 
CAas.  .-1.  6:358.     C.  976. 
Music  !     Dredging  deeper  yet,  Drag  into  day,  —  by  sound, 
thy  master-net,  —  The  abysmal  bottom-growth.     Chas.  A. 
6  :  359.     C.  977. 
ghost-like  pant  for  outlet  all  in  vain  Till  Music  loose  them. 

CAas. /I.  6:360.     C.  977. 
Music  was  poured  by  perfect  miiiistrants.  By  Halle,  Schu- 
mann, Piatti,  Joachiin.     Founder  6  :  387.     C.  947. 
Music's.     A   help   to   music's    mystery   which   mind   fails  To 
fathom.     Pau.  1  :  23.     C.  10. 
Be  still  to  me  A  key  to  music's  mystery  when  mind  fails. 

Pau.  1  :  23.* 
Music's    throne    Seats   somebody   whom   somebody    unseats, 
aas. /I.  6:361.     C.  977. 
Musician,     poor  musician  scraping  gut  With  horsehair  teased 

that  no  harmonics  come  !     Red  Cott.  5  :  33.     C.  749. 
Musician's,     (such    sweet    Soft  notes  as  yet  musician's   cun- 
ning Never  gave  the  enraptured  air.)     Pied  Piper  2:286. 
C.  270. 
Musicians.     The  rest  may  reason  and  welcome  :  't  is  we  musi- 
cians know.     Aht  F.  4  :  185.     C.  383. 
Mute,     overleans  the  sill  O'  the   window,  cold  and  pale  and 
mute  as  stone.  Strong  as  stone  also.      R.  and  B.  3:432. 
C.  584. 
Myself.     I    myself    am    what    I    know    not.      La    S.    6 :  63. 

C.  853. 
Myth.     A  myth  may  teach :  Only,  who  better  would  expound 
it  thus   Must   be  Euripides  not   ^Eschylus.      Ber.   de   M. 
6:300.     C.  954. 
fade  and  fall  Myth  after  myth  —  the  husk-like  lies  I  call 
New  truth's  corolla-safeguard.     Chas.  A.  Q: 363.     C.  978. 


170  NAKEDNESS  —  NATURE 


N 

Nakedness.     And  Nakedness  in  her  due  niche  below.     Prince 

H.  4  :  368.     C.  696. 
Name.     Its   soft   meandering   Spanish  name  :  What  a  name  ! 

Floiver's  2:9.     C.  166. 
took  her  name  into  his  mouth,  Licked,  and  then  let  it  go  again, 

the  beast,  Signed  with  his  slaver.   R.  and  B.  3  :  222.    C.  503. 
My  name  helped  to  a  mirtliful  circumstance :  "  Joseph."     R. 

and  B.  3:227.     C.  505. 
"  I  name  his  name,  and  there  you  start  and  wince  As  criminal 

from  the  red  tongs'  touch  !  "     R.  and  B.  3  :  267.     C.  520. 
some  rich  name  Vowel-lnids  thorned  about  with  consonants. 

.4^.^.5:114.     C.  634. 
Name  and  deed  alike  are  lost.     Herve  5  :  358.     C.  816. 
Names.    Two  names  now  snap  and  flash  from  mouth  to  mouth  — 

(Sparks,  flint  and  steel  strike).     R.  and  B.  3  :  362.    C.  556. 
Nap.     Suddenly  starting  from  a  nap,  as  it  were  A  dog-sleep 

with  one  shut,  one  open  orb.     R.  and  B  3:  7.     C.  417. 
Nastiness.     hug  to  heart  again  The  banished  nastiness  too  dear 

to  drop  !     Ari.  .4.5:  176.     C.  659. 
Nature.     Nature  would  point  at  one  whose  quivering  lip  Was 

bathed  in  her  enchantments.     Pau.  1:2.     C.  2. 
Nature  has  time,  may  mend  Mistake,  she  knows  occasion  will 

recur.     Sor.  1 :  240.     C.  93. 
"  See  Or  shut  your  eyes,"  said  Nature  peevishly,  "  It  nothing 

skills  :  I  cannot  help  my  case."     Childe  R.  2  :  332.     C.  287. 
How  lessons  Nature  when  I  look  to  learn  ?    R.  and  B.  3  :  177. 

C.  485. 
Ah,  Nature  —  baffled  she  recurs,  alas!     Nature  imperiously 

exacts  her  due.     R.  and  B.  3  :  336.     C.  546. 
Respect  we  Nature  that  makes  least  as  most,  Marvellous  in 

the  minim  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  428.     C.  582. 
many  a  thrill  Of  kinship,  I  confess  to,  with  the  powers  Called 

Nature.     Prince  H.  4  :  354.     C.  691. 
Nature  prefers  a  motion  by  unrest,  Advancement  through  this 

force  which  jostles  that.     Prince  H.  4  :  376.     C.  699. 
Nature  is   roused  and  sets  things  right   herself.     Red    Cott. 

5  :  78.     C.  766. 

all  around  Nature,  and,  inside  her  circle,  safety  from  world's 
sight  and  sound.     La  S.  6  :  56.     C.  850. 

—  Man's  mild  protest  that  there  's  something  more  than  Na- 
ture, man  requires.     La  S.  6  :  57.     C.  851. 

Nature  was  made  to  be  by  Man  enjoyed  First.     Chris.  Sm. 

6  :  317.     C.  961. 

At  Nature  dost  thou  shrink  amazed?  God  is  it  who  tran- 
scends.    Prol.  ^.  6  :  390  ;  7  :  3.     C.  987. 


NATURE  — NEUTRALIZER  171 

Nature.    Oh,  Nature  —  good  !   Oh,  Art —  no  whit  Less  worthy  ! 

Both  in  one  — accurst!    5arf  Z>.  7//.  G  :  398  ;  7  :  22.    C.  1)90. 
Naught.     Each  was  naught  to  each,  must  I  be  tokl  ?  We  were 

fellow  mortals,  naught  beside  ?     Evelyn  2  :  24.     C.  171. 
Accounts   as  naught  old  gains  of  rank  and   birth.  Ancestral 

obligation,  recent  fame.     Dan.  Bar.  G  :  30G.     C.  956. 
Naughtiness,     all  its  tolerated  naughtiness.     Red  Cott.  o  :  52. 

C.  75G. 
Nauseous,     were  I  not,  as  a  man  may  say,  cautions  How  I 

trench,  more  than  needs,  on  the  nauseous.     Flight  2  :  307. 

C.  278. 
Necessity.    Necessity,  that  rules  the  universe.   Ari.  A.  5:14G. 

C.  647. 
Neck.     And  her  neck  looks  like  marble  misted  o'er  With  love- 

breatli.     Pan.  1 :  22.     C.  10. 
Need.    Yes,  a  bitter  thing  To  see  our  lady  above  all  need  of  us. 

Pippa  1  :  349.     C.  137. 
Who,  for  our  own  good,  makes  the  need  extreme.  Till  at  the 

last   He  puts  forth  might  and  saves,     it.  and   B.  3  :  268. 

C.  521. 
I  need  thee  and  I  feel  thee  and  I  love  thee.     Paw.  1  :  20. 

C.  9. 
Nelson's.     —  Here  's  to  Nelson's  memory  !     Nat.  in  D.  2:8. 

C.  166. 
Neologism.     Dare  I  make  use  of  such  neologism.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  314.     C.  538. 
Nephevrs.     men  would  merrily  say,  Halt,  deaf  and  blind,  .  .  . 

These  be  the  nephews  of  Pope  Innocent !     R.  and  iJ.  3  :  8. 

C.  417. 
Nepotism.     Also  he  peeled  off  that  last  scandal-rag  Of  Nepo- 
tism.    R.  and  J5.  3 :  8.     C.  417. 
Nerve,     the  nerve  thus  laid  bare  To  nip  at,  new  and  nice,  with 

finger-nail !     R.  and  B.  3  :  175.     C.  484. 
Must  prove  we  have  —  not  courage  ?  well  then  —  nerve  !    Two 

Poets  6  :  91.     C.  864. 
Nerves.    Mine  are  the  nerves  to  quake  at  a  mouse  :  If  a  spider 

drops  I  shrink  with  fear.     Mary  W.  6  :  206.     C.  916. 
Nescience.     Of  all   the  lamentable   debts   incurred  By   Man 

through  buying  knowledge,  tliis  were  worst  :  That  he  shouhl 

find  his  last  gain  prove  his  first  Was  futile — merely  nes- 
cience absolute.     Chas.  A.  6  :.362.     C.  978. 
Net.     God   forsakes   me.     I  am   in   a  net  And  cannot   move. 

Straf.  1  :  181.     C.  69. 
Nettles.     Don't   nettles  make  a  broth  Wholesome   for   blood 

grown  lazy  and  thick  ?     Epil.  Pacch.  5  :  394.     C.  829. 
Neutralizer.     That  ice-block  'twi.xt  the  sun  and  me,  lay  low 

The  neutralizer  of  all  good  and  truth.     R.  and  B.  3  :  273. 

C.  523. 


172  NEVER  — NIGHT-CAP 

Never.     Never  to  be  again  !     But  maiij-  more  of  the  kind  As 

good,  nay,  better  perchance  :  is  this  your  comfort  to  me  ? 

Abt  F.  4  :  184.     C.  383. 
New.     But  don't  suppose  the  new  was  able  to  efface  The  old 

without  a  struggle,  a  pang  !     Fifne  4  :  425.     C.  725. 
'Tis  time  New  hopes  should  animate  the  world,  new  light 

Should  dawn.     Para.  1  :  35.     C.  15. 
Quite  a  new  word  that  means  the  very  same  —  And  o'er  the 

hard  place  slide   they  with  a  smile.     R.   and  B.   3 :  195. 

C.  492. 
In  rushed  new  things,  the  old  were  rapt  away.     R.   and  B. 

3  :  210.     C.  498. 
The  new  adventure  for  the  novel  man.    Ari.A.  5  :  129.    C.  640. 
Ne'ws.     What   should    delight   me  like    the   news   of   friends 

Whose   memories  were    a   solace  to  me  oft.     Para.  1 :  64. 

C.  26. 
the  enraptured-much  But  puzzled-more  when  told  the  won- 
drous news.     R.  and  B.  3  :  1 10.     C.  458. 
Oh,  better,  very  best  of  all  the  news.    Red  Cott.  5:4.    C.  738. 
Dearer  the  news  than  dayspring  after  night !   Shah  A.  6  :24o. 

C.  931. 
Newcastle.     Thou,  whilom  of  Newcastle  organist !    Chas.  A . 

6  :  355.     C.  975. 
Nicolo.     My   sculptor  is  Nicolo  the  Pisan,  My  painter  —  who 

but  Cimabue  ?     Old  Pict.  2  :  41.     C.  177. 
Night.     The  night,  late  strewn  with  clouds  and  flying  stars,  Is 

blank  and  motionless.     Para.  1  :  84.     C.  34. 
No  change  !     The  weary  night  is  well-nigh  spent,  The  lamp 

burns  low.     Para.  1  :  iOl.     C.  40. 
whose  spirit  yearns  For  a  cool  night  after  this  weary  day. 

Struf.  1  :  181.     C.  69. 
Day  for  folly,  night  for  schooling  !     Pippa  1  :  365.     C.  144. 
In  Florence  as  I  trod  the  terrace,  breathed  The  beauty  and 

the  fearfulness  of  night.     R.  and  B.  3  :  12.     C.  419. 
Promised  as  much  at  the  moment  ;  but,  alack.  Night  brings 

discretion.     R.  and  B.  3  :  91.     C.  450. 
How  quickly  night  comes  !     Lo,  already  't  is  the  land  Turns 

sea-like.     Fifine  4  :  420.     C.  723. 
note  momently  the  mace  Of  night  fall  here,  fall  there,  bring 

change  with  every  blow.     Fifine  4  :  430.     C.  728. 
So  night  can  fuse  Earth  with  her  all-comprising  sky.     Pan 

6  :  188.     C.  909. 
Night  for  her  music  boasts  but  owls  and  bats.     Joch.  6  :  226. 

C.  924. 
Night   wist   Her  work   done  and   betook  herself   in  mist  To 

marsh  and  hollow.     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  300.     C.  954. 
Night-cap.      Night-cap  .  .  .  Old    honest   guardian   of   man's 

head  and  hair.     Red  Cott.  o:o.     C.  738. 


NIGHT-CAP  — NOSE  173 

Night-cap.     See,  the  church  With  its  white  steeple  .  .  .  Perks 

as    it  were   the   night-cap  of   the   town.      Red  Cott.  o :  9. 

C.  7-10. 
Night-caps.     Night-caps,  night's  comfort  of  the  human  race  : 

Their   usage   may  be   growing   obsolete.     Red    Cott.  5 : 6. 

C.  738. 
Night's.     Day's  turn  is  over,  now  arrives  the  night's.     Pippa 

1  :  3GG.     C.  144. 
Nightmare,     a  figure  that  beseems  The  grisliest  nightmare  of 

the  Church's  dreams.     Sor.  1 :  199.     C.  77. 
Ninnies.     "  Ninnies  stock  Noodleclom,  but  folk  more  sage  Re- 
sist  contagious   folly,    never   fear  !  "      Two   Poets   6  :  100. 

C.  868. 
Nobility,     that  which,  their  life  long.  They  hungered  in  the 

hearts  of  them  to  gain  —  Incorporation  with  nobility.     R. 

mirfi?.  3:154.     C.  475. 
Noble.     He  is  a  noble  spirit  in  noble  form.     Colombe  2  :  208. 

C.  242. 
Was  noble  too,  of  old  blood  thrice-refined  That  shrinks  from 

clownish  coarseness  in  disgust.     R.  and  B.  3  :  123.     C.  463. 
Irregular  noble    scapegrace  —  son   the    same  !      R.  and  B. 

3  :  380.     C.  563. 
Nobles.     Were  not  we  put  into  a  beaten  path.  Bid  pace  the 

world,  we  nobles  born  and  bred.    R.  and  B.  3  :  406.    C.  573. 
Nobleness.    All  with  a  touch  of  nobleness,  despite  Their  error, 

upward  tending  all  though  weak.     Para.  1  :  121.     C.  48. 
Noise.     How  good  is  noise  !  what 's  silence  but  despair  Of  mak- 
ing sound  match  gladness  never  there?      Chas.  A.  6:364. 

C.  978. 
Nonsense-work.   It 's  fancying,  fable-making,  nonsense-work. 

Sludge  4  :  226.     C.  399. 
Noon.     Noon  is  the  conqueror.     Ger.  de  L.  6: 349.     C.  973. 
Noontide,     the  stress  of  the  noontide  —  those  sunbeams  like 

swords  !     Saul  2  :  48.     C.  180. 
Normandy.     Meek,  hitherto  un-Murrayed  bathing-place.  Best 

loved   of   seacoast  -  nookful  Normandy  !      Red  Cott.  5  : 1. 

C.  737. 
Normandy   shown   minute   yet   magnified.      Red    Cott.   5 : 5. 

C.  738. 
Norse,     those  tall  grave  dazzling  Norse,  High-cheeked,  lank- 
haired,  toothed  whiter  than  the  morse.    Sor.  1  :  241.    C.  93. 
North--wrind.     Still  the   north-wind,  by   God's   grace  !     Herve 

5:356.     C.  816. 
Northern.      Northern  thought   is   slow   and  durable.      Luria 

2:402.     C.  315. 
Nose,   clear  as  flint  On  either  side  the  formidable  nose  Curved, 

cut  and  colored  like  an  eagle's  claw.     How    it   S.  4:59. 

C.  336. 


174  NOSE  — OBJECT 

Nose.     The   long   triiimpliant   nose   attains.      Inn.  A.  5 : 277. 

C.  787. 
Nostrils,     nostrils  wide  Waited  their  incense.     Ari.  A.  5  :113. 

C.  633. 
Nothing.     Make  nothing  of  my  day  because  so  brief  ?   Rather 

make  more.     5or.  1  :  314.     0.123. 
Nothing-perfect.     The  submission  of  man's  nothing-perfect  to 

God's  all-complete.     Saul  2  :  56.     C.  183. 
Nothings.    Last,  the  nothings  that  extinguish  embers  of  a  vivid 

day.     La  S.  6  :  56.     C.  850. 
Nothingness.     (Oh,  here  as  elsewhere,  nothingness  of  man  ! ) 

n.  and  B.  3 :  379.     C.  563. 
Novel,     scrofulous  French  novel  .  .  .  Simply  glance  at  it,  you 

grovel  ...  in  Belial's  gripe.     Solil.  2  :  13.     C.  168. 
Novelty.     I  like  to  use  the  thing  I  find.  Rather  than  strive  at 

unfound  novelty.     Prince  H.  4  :  337.     C.  684. 
Novice.     AVith    craftsmen  versed    as    they  What   chance   of 

competition  when  the  tools  Only  a  novice  wields  ?     Geo. 

B.D.6 -.322.     C.  962. 
Null.     Is  thrice  tried  now,  found  threefold  worse  than  null.    R. 

and  B.  3  :  166.     C.  480. 
Nullity.     I  call  a  nullity  in  female  shape.  Vapid  disgust,  soon 

to  be  pungent  plague.     R.  and  B.  3  .-428.     C.  582. 
The  nullity  of  cultivated  souls.     Red  Cott.  5:3.     C.  737. 


Oars.     Then,  in  a  frenzy,  so  the  noble  oars  Churned  the  black 

water  white.     Balau.  4  :  265.     C.  603. 
Oared.     Pricked   by  the  reed  and  fretted  by  the  fly,  Oared 

by  the   boatman-spider's  pair  of   arms!      Ari.  A.  5:103. 

C.  630. 
Oaths,     oaths  flung  At  me  like  so  many  fire-balls,  fast  as  he 

could  wag  his  tongue.     Clive  6  :  162.     C.  896. 
Obedience.      Crowned   him,  this  time,  the  virtuous  woman's 

way,  With  an  exact  obedience.     R.  and  B.  3  :  340.      C.  548. 
Obedient,     obedient  to  the  end  According  to  the  light  allotted, 

law  Prescribed  thy  life.     R.  and  B.  3  :  379.     C.  563. 
Obey.     My  reasons  after  ;  reason  upon  reason  After  :  but  now, 

obey  me  !     King  V.  1:  383.     C.  151. 
Since  it  is  he  can  strike,  let   her  obey !     R.  and  B.  3 :  435. 

C.  585. 
Obeys.     No  animal  —  much  less  our  lordly  Man  —  Obeys   its 

like.     Geo.  B.  D.  G  :  322.     C.  962. 
Object.     No  matter  what  the  object  of  a  life,  Small  work  or 

large,  .  .  .  There  are  known  fruits  to  judge  obedience  by. 

Prince  H.  4: -.336.     C.  684. 


OBLIVION  — OLD  175 

Oblivion.     Yet,  a  little  while,  .  .  .  and  here  's  time  paid  liis 
tax,  Oblivion  gone  home  with  her  harvesting.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  10.     C.  418. 

smoke.  Silence,  oblivion,  all  death-damps  that  choke  !     Two 

Poets  6  :  79.     C.  860. 
Obloquy.     I  vowed  to  rest  and  smile  no  more  Until  I  cleared 

liis  name  from  obloquy.     Kinr/  C.  1:394.     C.  155. 
Obscurity.     No,  in  renouncing  fame,  my  loss  was  light.  Choos- 
ing obscurity,  my  chance  was  well  !    R.  and  B.  3  :  472.    C.  599. 
Obsequiousness,     give  submission.  Obsequiousness  and  flattery 

a  turn.     SouVs  Tr.  2  :  340.     C.  290. 
Obstacles.     Old  things  are  passed  and  all  again  is  new,  Over 

and   gone    the   obstacles    to   peace.      R.   and    B.   3 :  326. 

C.  543. 
'Mid   obstacles   in   seeming,   points    that    prove   Advantage. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  365.     C.  557. 
Obtuse,     too  obtuse   Of   ear,  through   iteration  of   command. 

R.and  B.^:ZS2.     C.  564. 
Occasion,     a  brisk  lad.  Who  never  lets  a  good  occasion  slip. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  36.     C.  428. 
But  life  's  hard.  Occasion  rare.     Prince  H.  4  :  353.     C.  691. 
Occasions.     No  more  occasions  now,  though  he  should  crave 

Just  one,  in  right  of  superhuman  toil.    Sor.  1  :292.     C.  114. 
Ocean.     We  mortals  cross  the  ocean  of  this  world  Each  in  his 

average  cabin  of  a  life.     Bishop  B.  4  :  94.     C.  350. 
Ocean's.    O  laughters  manifold  Of  ocean's  ripple  at  didl  earth's 

despair  !     Ger.  deL.6: 348.     C.  972. 
Odious.     Odious  in  spite  of  every  attribute  Commonly  deemed 

love-worthy  ?     Mihrab  6  :  255.     C.  935. 
O'erlooked.     Nobody   o'erlooked,   save    God.     Pietro  6:174. 

C.  902. 
O'erpuuished.    O'erpimished  wrong  grew  right.   Epil.  Camel-D. 

6  :  260.     C.  937. 
Offensive,     wari'anted  no  whit  Offensive  to  instructed  taste. 

Ari.  A.  5:233.     C.  678. 
Offer.     And,  all  these  loves,  .  .  .  Thev  offer  up  to  God  for  a 

present  ?     Chris.-Eve  4  :  17.     C.  322. 
Offspring.      The   hopeful    offspring   of   high   parentage    Was 

fleece-marked  moral  and  religious  sheep.     Red  Cott.  5  :  86. 

C.  769. 
Old.     I  make  the  best  of  the  old,  nor  try  for  new.     Prince  H. 

4  :  337.     C.  684. 

A  poor  man,  rarely  having  handled  lance,  And  rather  old, 
weary,  and  far  from  sure  His  Squires  are  not  the  Giant's 
friends.     Straf.  1:153.     C.  59. 

If  old  things  remain  old  things  all  is  well.  Any  Wife  2  :68. 
C.  188. 

old,  O'  the  wane  at  least,  in  all  things  :  what  do  you  say  To 


176  OLD  — ORBS 

her  who  frankly  thus  confirms  my  doubt  ?   iJ.  and  B.  3  :  426. 
C.  581. 
Old.     How  these  old  men  like  giving  youth  a  push  !    R.  m^d  B. 

3  :  465.     C.  596. 

Grow  old  along  with  me  !     The  best  is  yet  to  be,  The  last 

of  life,  for  which  the  first  was  made.     Ben  Ezra  4  :  185. 

C.  383. 
I  wager  't  is  old  to  you  As  the  story  of  Adam  and  Eve,  and 

possibly  quite  as  true.     Ivan  6  :  131.     C.  881. 
Old,  yea,  but,  undiminished  of  a  drop.  The  vital  essence  pulsed. 

Joch.  6  :  211.     C.  918. 
Olive.     The  statist's  olive  as  the  poet's  bay.     Ari.  A.  o:  105. 

C.  630. 
Olive-plants.     Look  at  those  four  young  precious  olive-plants. 

R.andB.^:^o.     C.  589. 
Olive-trees.      The   wind   makes    olive-trees    up   yonder    hill 

Whiten  and  shudder.     Joch.  6  :  224.     C.  924. 
Ominous.     The  same  :  Only  with  something  ominous  and  dark, 

Fatal,  inevitable.     5?ra/.  1:190.     C.  73. 
Omnipotence.     Never  enough  faith  in  omnipotence, — Never 

too    much,  bv  parity,  of  faith  In  impuissance.      Cherries 

6  :  264.     C.  939. 
Back  are  we  brought  thus  to  the  starting-point  —  Man's  impo- 

tency,  God's  omnipotence.     Bean-St.  6  :  276.     C.  944. 
Omniscience.     Omniscience  sees,  Omnipotence  could  stop,  Om- 

nibenevolence  pardons.     R.  and  B.  3:447.     C.  590. 
Once.     It   once    might   have    been,  once  only.     Youth  and  A. 

4  :  217.     C.  396. 

One.     I  would  have  one  joy.  But  one  in  life,  so  it  were  wholly 

mine.     Pau.  1  :  15.     C.  7. 
I  would  have  but  one  Delight   on  earth,  so  it  were  wholly 

mine,  One  rapture  all  my  soul  could  fill.     Pau.  1  :  15.* 
If  any  two  creatures  grew  into  one.   They  would  do  more 

than  the  world  has  done  ;  Though  each  apart  were  never 

so  weak.     Flight  2  :  303.     C.  276. 
Out  of  the  genial  morning  company.  One  face  is  left  to  take 

into  the  night.     Luria  2  :  399.     C.  314. 
Oh,  you  purged  the  skv  Of  all  gods  save  the  One,  the  great 

and  good.     R.  and  B.  3  :447.     C.  590. 
Operation.     He  the  Operant  —  who  shall  dare  Describe  His 

operation  ?     Joch.  6  :  231.     C.  926. 
Opportunity,     lost  the  opportunity  Through  timid  scruples  as 

to  right  and  wrong.     Prince  H.  4  :  363.     C.  694. 
Opportunities,     what  opportunities  the  virtuous   forego,  the 

villanous  seize.     Pippa  1  :  362.     C.  143. 
Optic.     Friend,  did  you  need  an  optic  glass,   Which  were  your 

choice  ?     Prol.  A  sol.  6  :  389  ;  7  : 1.     C.  987. 
Orbs.     And  how  the  dark  orbs  dwelt  deep  underneath,  Looked 


ORDAINED  —  OWN  177 

out  of  such  a  sad  sweet  heaven  on  me  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  233. 

C.  507. 
Ordained.     How  then  should  man,  the  all-unworthy,  dare  Pro- 
pose   to   set    aside   a    thing    ordained  ?      Family   6 :  246. 

C.  932. 
Ordeal.     He  staggers  through  the  ordeal  :  let  him  go,  Strew  no 

fresh  fire  before  him  !     Straf.  1  :  177.     C.  68. 
Ordinary.     An  ordinary  soul,  no  more,  no  less.  About  whose 

life    earth's   common   sights   revolve.       Two    Poets   6  :  90. 

C.  864. 
went  ou,  in  peace  or  strife,  The  world's  way,  lived  an  ordinary 

life.     Two  Poets  6 -.90.     C.  864. 
Ore.     One  particle  of  ore  beats  out  such  leaf  !     Red  Cott.  5  :  75. 

C.  765. 
—  No  matter  if  the  ore  for  which  zeal  delves  Be  gold  or  cop- 

rolite.     Geo.  B.  D.  G  :  320.     C.  962. 
Original.     'T  is  the  faith  that  launched  point-blank  her  dart 

At  the  head  of  a  lie  —  taught  Original   Sin.      Gold   Hair 

4  :  169.     C.  378. 
Osculation.     Such  osculation  was  a  potent  means,     it.  and  B. 

3 : 336.     C.  546. 
Outcry,     the  world's  outcry  Around  the  rush  and  ripple  of  any 

fact  Fallen  stonewise.     R.  and  B.  3  :  19.     C.  422. 
Outrage.     When  evil's  mastery  is  understood   In  some  plain 

outrage.     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  297.     C.  953. 
Outraged,     outraged,  we  protest  by  eye's  recoil  The  opposite 

proves  somewhere  rule  and  law  !     Ari.  A.  5  :  130.     C.  641. 
Outside.     Learned,    life-long,    i'   the    first   outside   of   things, 

Though  bat  for  blindness  to  what   lies  beneath.      Balau. 

4  :  303.     C.  618. 
Out'ward.     It  is  the  outward  product  men  appraise.     R.  and  B. 

3:393.     C.  568. 
Over.     All 's  over,  then  :  does  truth  sound  bitter  As  one  at  first 

believes  ?     Lost  Mis.  2  :  20.     C.  170. 
Overburdened.     Why,  the  overburdened  mind  Broke  down, 

what   was   a    brain   became   a   blaze.      R.  and   B.   3 :  64. 

C.  439. 
Oversight.     Oversight  of  the  master  just  supplied  Bv  zeal  i' 

the  servant.     R.  and  B.  3  :  187.     C.  489. 
this  single  oversight  of  care,  This  hebetude  that  marred  saga- 
city.    R.  and  B.  3  :374.     C.  561. 
Ovid.     As  Ovid,  a  like  sufferer  in  the  cause  Planted  a  primrose- 
patch  by  Pontus.     R.  and  B.  3  :  60.     C.  438. 
OTvn.     I    had   fancied  nothing  that   bears  price  In  the  whole 

world  was  left  to  call  my  own.     SouVs  Tr.  2  :  337.     C.  289. 
there  's  one   thing  plain    and  positive  ;    Man  seeks   his  own 

good  at  the  whole  world's  cost.     Luria  2  :  365.     C.  300. 


178  PACCHIAROTTO  — PAIN 


Pacchiarotto.     Giacomo  Pacchiarotto  Wlio   took    "  Reform " 

for  his  motto  ?     Pacch.  5  :  318.     C.  802. 
Paced.      I  .  .  .  paced   its    lozeuge-brickwork   spiinkled   cool. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  11.     C.  419. 
Pacific.     He  came  pacific,  rather,  as  strength  shotikl.     Balau. 

4  :  299.     C.  GIG. 
Pagans.     Pagans  held,  we  know,  ^lan  always  ought  to  aim  at 

good  and  truth.     R.  and  B.  3  :  337.     C.  547. 
Paganini.      From  this  did   Paganiui  comb  the  fierce  Electric 

sparks.     Red  Cott.  5:7.     C.  739. 
Paid,     paid  according  as  heart's-will  had  met  Hand's-power  in 

Art's  endeavor  to  ex]>ress.     Fr.  Fu.  G  :  331.     C.  9G5. 
Pain.     But  when  the  heart  suffers  a  blow.  Will  the  pain  pass  so 

soon,  do  you  know  ?     Glove  2  :  250.     C.  257. 
Circumvallated  month  by  month,  and  week  By  week,  .  .  . 

closer  and  yet  closer  still  with  pain.     R.   and  B.   3  :  123. 

C.  463. 
—  as  if  The  guardian  angel  discontinued  pain  Because  the 

hope  of  cure  was  gone  at  last.     R.  and  B.  3  :  21G.     C.  500. 
Longer  the  sufferance,  stronger  grows  the  pain.     R.  and  B. 

3:301.     C.  533. 
at  most  expenditure  Of  pain  bv  Who  devised  pain.     it.  and 

B.  3  :  386.     C.  565. 

Be  our  joys  three-parts  pain  !     Ben  Ezra  4  :  18G.     C.  384. 
Is  it  for  nothing  we  grow  old   and  weak.  We   whom   God 

loves  ?     When   pain   ends,   gain    ends    too.     Death   in   D. 

4:196.     C.  387. 
He  doth  His  worst  in  this  our  life,  Giving  just  respite  lest  we 

die  through  pain.  Saving  last  pain  for  worst,  —  with  which, 

an  end.     Caliban  4  :  212.     C.  394. 
he  could  not  see  a  beast  in  pain.  Much  less  a  man,  without 

the  will  to  aid.     Red  Cott.  5  :  72.     C.  763. 
Soul,   if   untrammelled    by   flesh,   unapprehensive   of    pain  ! 

Ixion  6  :  208.     C.  916. 
What  were  the  bond  'twixt  man  and  man,  dost  judge,  Pain 

once  abolished  ?     Mihrab  6  :  254.     C.  935. 
Put  pain  from  out  the  world,  what  room  were  left  For  thanks 

to  God,  for  love  to  Man  ?     Mihrah  6  :  255.     C.  936. 
But   pain  —  see   God's   Wisdom   at  work  !      Mihrab   6  :  256. 

C.  936. 

Man's  sense  avails  to  only  see,  in  pain,  A  hateful  chance  no 
man  but  would  avert.     Mihrab  6  :  256.     C.  936. 

In  the  eye  of  God  Pain  may  have  purpose  and  be  justified. 
Mihrab  6  :  256.     C.  936. 

Reflected  possibilities  of  pain.  Forsooth,  just  chasten  pleas- 
ure !     Bean-at.  6  :  275.     C.  943. 


PAIN  — PALM-APHIS  179 

Pain,     pain  that  was  ...  —  Forgotten,  pain  as  sure  to  be  let 

bide  aloof  its  time.     Bean-F:  6  :  403  ;  7  :  36.     C.  992. 
Pains.     There  's  none  cares,  like  a  fellow  of  the  craft,  For  the 

all-unestimated   sum   of   pains   That   go  to  a  success   the 

world  can  see.     Luria  2  :  381.     C.  307. 
the  serpent   pains  which   herald,   swarming   in,  the   dragon 

death.     La  S.6: 64.     C.  854. 
Painfully,     thou  shalt  painfully  attain  to  joy  While  hope  and 

fear  and  love  shall  keep  thee  man  !     Para.  1  :  120.     C.  48. 
Paint.     But  nobody  cared  ask  to  paint  .  .  .  Nor  grew  a  poet 

over  hair  and  eyes  Four  little  years  ago.     R.  and  B.  3  :  69. 

C.  441. 
Your  business  is  to  paint  the  souls  of  men.     Fra  Lippo  4  :  78. 

C.  344. 
A  fine  way  to  paint  soul,  by  painting  body  So  ill,  the  eye 

can't  stop  there,  must   go  further  And  can't  fare  worse. 

Fra  Lippo  4  :  78.     C.  344. 
God's   works  —  paint  any  one,  and  count  it  crime  To  let  a 

truth  slip.     Fra  Lippo  4  :  80.     C.  345. 
Does   he   paint  ?    be  fain  would  write   a  poem.     One  Word 

4 ;  125.     C.  362. 
No,  —  pamt  the  peasant  girl  all  peasant-like.  Spirit  and  flesh. 

Fr.  Fu.  6  :  341.     C.  970. 
Painted,     we  're  made  so  that  we  love  First  when  we  see  them 

painted,  things  we  have  passed  Perhaps  a  hundred  times 

nor  cared  to  see.     Fra  Lippo  4  :  80.     C.  345. 
Painter.      I  am  a  painter  who  cannot   paint.      Pippa  1  :  347. 

C.  137. 
Wliy,  first  he  sedulously  practiseth.  This  painter,  —  girding 

loin  and  lighting  lamp.     R.  and  B.  3  :  320.     C.  540. 
This  strange   thing  happened  to  a  painter  once.     Bea.  Sig. 

6  :  412  ;  7  :  57.     C.  996. 
Painters.     You  're   not   of   the   true   painters,  great  and  old. 

Fra  Lippo  4  :  79.     C.  344. 
Palace,     a  palace  there  —  Or  say,  a  fissure  in  the  honest  earth 

Whence  long  ago  had  curled  the  vapor  fii-st.     R.  and  B. 
3  :  13.     C.  419. 
Palace-rooms,     these  palace-room-s   Pregnant  with  memories 

of  the  past.     King  C.  1  :  410.     C.  161. 
Palate.      Tickles   his   palate   as   I   meant   it   should.     Plot-C. 

6  :  267.     C.  940. 
Palette,     a  palette  primed,  each   squeeze    Of  oil-paint  in  its 

proper  patch.     Bea.  Sig.  6  :  417  ;  7  :  67.     C.  998. 
Palliate.     To  palliate  —  well,  explain.  Expurgate  in  some  de- 
gree Your  soul  of  its  ugly  stain.     Bad  D.  II.  6  :  396  ;  7  :  19. 

C.  990. 
Palm-aphis.     There  's  the  palm-aphis,  minute  miracle  As  won- 
drous every  whit  as  thou  or  I.     Bean-St.  6  :  274.     C.  943. 


180  PALM  A  — PART 

Palma.  Palma,  Dante  spoke  with  in  the  clear  Amorous  silence 
of  the  Swoouiug-sphere.     Sor.  1 :  306.     C.  119. 

Pambo.  a  grave  tale  told  in  crambo  .  .  .  Whereof  the  hero  is 
Pambo.     Pambo  6  :  235.     C.  928. 

Pamperer.  some  gross  pamperer  of  the  flesh  And  niggard  in 
the  spirit's  nouiishment.     R.  and  B.  3  :  3.51.     C.  552. 

Pan.  Arcadia,  night,  a  cloud.  Pan,  and  the  moon.  Pan 
6  :  190.     C.  910. 

Pang.  —  would  pluck  pang  forth,  but  unclench  No  gripe  in 
the  act,  let  fall  no  money-piece.     R.  and  B.  3  :  .369.    C.  559. 

Paolo.  a  shrewd  younger  poorer  brother  yet.  The  Abate 
Paolo,  a  regular  priest.     R.  and  B.  3  :  39.     C.  429. 

Paracelsus.     And  this  was  Paracelsus  !     Para.  1:122.     C.  48. 

Parasite,     parasite  and  picker-up  of  crumbs.  He  had  hung  on 
long.     R.  and  B.  3  :  77.     C.  444. 
dijjped  and  ducked,  Truckled  and  played  the  parasite  in  vain. 

Red  Cott.  5 -.90.     C.  770. 
distribute  —  melon-like  —  Portions  to  whoso  played  the  para- 
site.    Melon  6  :  242.     C.  930. 

Pardon.  There  may  be  pardon  yet :  all 's  doubt  beyond. 
Surely  the  bitterness  of  death  is  past !  A  Blot  2  :  157. 
C.  222. 

Pardonable.  So  politic,  so  self-preservative,  Therefore  so 
pardonable  —  though  so  wrong  !     Red  Cott.  5  :  43.     C.  752. 

Pardoned,  wait  us,  Pardoned  in  heaven,  the  first  by  the 
throne!     Lost  L.  2:4:.     C.  164. 

Parents.  O  we  poor  parents  —  could  we  prophesy  !  Red  Cott. 
5  :  51.     C.  756. 

Parents'.  Lovers  grow  cold,  men  learn  to  hate  their  wives,  And 
only  parents'  love  can  last  our  lives.    Pippa  1:  331.    C.  130. 

Parian.  The  first  faint  scratch  O'  the  stone  ^\^ll  test  its  na- 
ture, teach  its  worth  To  idiots  who  name  Parian  —  coprolite. 
R.  and  B.  3  :2-io.     C.  500. 

Paris.     For  the  whole  world  to  worship  —  nothing  less  !     Was 
not  the  whole  polite  world  Paris,  pray  ?     Two  Poets  6  :  82. 
C.  861. 
Paris  holds  the  pick  of  earth.     Red  Cott.  5  :  19.     C.  743. 

Paris'.  Paris'  self  Superlatively  big  with  life  and  death  To  all 
the  world.     Red  Cott.  5  :  75.     C.  764. 

Parnassus,  he  hath  scaled  Parnassus  at  one  jump.  Joining 
the  Delphic  quill  and  Getic  trump.  Two  Poets  6 :  88. 
C.  863. 

Parsimonious.  Warily  parsimonious,  when  no  need,  Waste- 
ful as  drunkenness  at  undue  times  ?  Karshish  4 :  67. 
C.  339. 

Parson.  Some  parson,  some  smug  crop-haired  smooth-chinned 
sort  Of  curate-creature.     Inn  A.  5  :  260.     C.  780. 

Part,  learn  Man's  proper  play  with  truth  in  part,  before  En- 
trusted with  the  whole.     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  295.     C.  952. 


PART  —  PAST  181 

Part.     I  seem  to  see  !     We  meet  and  part  ;  't  is  brief.     Any 
Wife  2  :  68.     C.  188. 
Suppose   that   we   part    (work   done,   comes   play).      Pamho 

6  :  235.     C.  928. 
So  we   but  meet   nor  part   again!      Spccul.  6:394;   7:13. 
C.  989. 
Parties.     Two  parties  take  the  world  up,  and  allow  No  third, 
yet  have  one  principle,  subsist  By  the  same  injustice.     Sor. 
1:282.     Clio. 
Pasquin's.     The  street  of  the  Governo,  Pasquin's  Street,     it. 

and  B.  3  :  461.     C.  595. 
Passion.     Only  I  discern  —  Infinite  passion,  and  the  pain  Of 
finite  hearts  that  yearn.      Two  in  C.  2  :  73.     C.  189. 
folks  who  put  me  in  a  passion  May  find  me  pipe  after  another 

fashion.     Pied  Piper  2  :  286.     C.  270. 
moved,  from  pathos  at  the  wrong  endured.  To  passion.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  22.     C.  423. 
passion  .  .  .  Indisputably  mistress  of  the  man  Whose  form 

of  worship  is  self-sacrifice.     R.  and  B.  3  :  211.     C.  498. 
The   passion  that  left   the  ground  to  lose  itself  in  the  sky. 

Abt  r.  4  :  184.     C.  383. 
it  was  mere  passion  and  mistake,  Or  erring  zeal  for  right, 

which  changed  the  truth.     Death  in  D.  4  :  200.     C.  389. 
calm  above  ]\Iy  passion,  the  old  statuesque  regard,  The  sad 

petrific  smile  !     Numph.  5  :  350.     C.  814. 
what  wonder  if  passion  warms  The  pulse  in  a  man  if  you  play 

with  his  heart  ?     Mar.  Rel.  6  :  123.     C.  877. 
Passion  it  was  that  made  those  breath-bursts  thick  I  took  for 

mirth  subsiding  into  rest.     Ger.  de  L.  6  :350.     C.  973. 
The  dormant  passion  needing  but  a  look  To  burst  into  immense 
life  !     Inap.  6  :  400  ;  7  :  27.     C.  991. 
Passion's.     I  do  not  tell  a  lie  so  arrant  As  say  ray  passion's 

wings  are  furled  up.     Chris-Eve  4  :  26.     C.  325. 
Passions,     with  many  a  weed,  And  plenty  of  passions  run  to 
seed.  But  a  little  good  grain  too.     J.  Lee  4  :  156.     C.  374. 
the  infinitude  Of  passions,  loves  and  hates,  man  pampers  till 
his  mood  Becomes  himself.     Fijine  4  :  427.     C.  726. 
Passionless.    Passionless  'mid  their  passionate  votaries.     Para. 

1  :  42.     C.  18. 

Passive,     wisel}' passive  Where  action's  fruitless.     Soul's   Tr. 

2  :  339.     C.  290. 

Past,      the  past  is  in  its  grave  Though  its  ghost    haunts  us. 

Paw.  1:2.     C.  3. 
I  saw  no  use  in  the  past :  only  a  scene  Of  degradation,  ugliness 

and  tears,  The  record  of  disgraces  best  forgotten,  A  sullen 

page  in  hum.an  chronicles  Fit  to  erase.    Para.  1 :  120.    C.  47. 
to  see  the  dim  Abysmal  past  divide  its   hatef  id  surge.     .Sor. 

1 :  194.     C.  75. 


182  PAST — PATRIOT-STAR 

Past,     the  blotted  past 's  a  blank.     King  C.  1:394:.     C.  155. 
The   past   Breaks    up    beneath   my  footing.     Druses   2 :  117. 

C.  205. 
Do   not   think   too   much   upon   the   past  !     A    Blot   2 :  177. 

C.  230. 
you  enable  me  to  risk  my  future.  By  giving  me  a  past  beyond 

recall.     Colomhe  2  :  193.     C.  236' 
Ponder  on  the  entire  past  Laid  together  thus  at  last.     Flight 

2:304.     C.  277. 
For  past  is  past.     it.  aiid  B.  3  :  245.     C.  512. 
I  own  the  Past  profuse  Of  power  each  side,  perfection  every 

turn.     Ben  Ezra  4  :  187.     C.  384. 
There  one  may  fairly  throw  behind  one's  back  The  used-up 

worn-out  Past,  we  want  away.  And  make  a  fresh  beginning 

of  stale  life.     Red  Cott.  5  :  22.     C.  744. 
Ah,  the  Past,  the  pearl-gift  tlirown  To  hogs,  time  's  opportu- 
nity,    /oc/t.  6:213.     C.  919. 
on  his  heart's   eminence   An  altar  to  the  never-dying  Past. 

Dan.  Bar.  6  :  310.     C.  958. 
the  Past  indeed  Is  past,  gives  way  before  Life's  best  and  last, 

The  all-including  Future  !     Ger.  de  L.  6  :351.     C.  973. 
Past  help,  past  reach  !    'T  is  in  the  heart  —  you  cannot  reach 

the  heart.     King  C.  1  :  412.     C.  162. 
Paten.     Against  my  heart,  beneath  my  head,  bowed  low,  As 

we  priests  carry  the  paten.     R.  and  B.  3  :225.     C.  504. 
Path,     a   path    Inviting   you,  distinct   with   footprints  yet  Of 

many   a   mighty    marcher    gone   that   way.      Para.    1  :  40. 

C.  17. 
Patience,      there    are   times    when   patience   proves   at   fault. 

Para.  1  :  70.     C.  28. 

—  You  look  away  and   your  lip  is  curled  ?   Patience,  a  mo- 
ment's space  !     Light  W.  2 :  277.     C.  267. 

But  patience  under  wrong  works  slow  and  sure.     Soul's  Tr. 
2  :  339.     C.  290. 

—  preferred  plav  prodigy  Of  patience  which  the  world  calls 
cowardice.      R.  and  B.  3  :  184.     C.  488. 

Have  patience  !     In  this  sudden  smoke  from  hell,  —  So  things 

disguise  themselves,  —  I    cannot    see.      R.  and  B.  3  :  189. 

C.  489. 
our  patience  at  the  boiling-point.     Red  Cott.  5  :  12.     C.  741. 
Patient.     Patient  through  the  watches  long,  Serving  most  with 

none  to  see.     Serenade  2  :  74.     C.  190. 
with  the  patient  brow  And   lamentable  smile  on  those  poor 

lips.     R.  and  B.  3 :  68.     C.  441. 
I  will  be  patient  and  proud,  and  soberly  acquiesce.       Alt  V. 

4  :  185.     C.  383. 
Patriot-star.      a  patriot-star  Steadfast  athwart  our  country's 

night  of  things,  To  beacon.     Ari.  A.  5  :  117.     C.  635. 


i 


PATRIOTISM  — PEARL  183 

Patriotism,      seems  this  patriotism   The  easiest   virtue  for  a 

selfish  man  To  acquire.     Pippa  1  :  355.     C.  140. 

Patron,    the  so-styled  Patron  of  the  Poor,  Official  mouthpiece  of 

the  five  Too  poor  to  fee  a  better.     R.  and  B.  3:5.     C.  416. 

Pause.     Pause  here  upon  this  strip  of  time  Allotted  you  out 

of  eternity  !     King  C.  1  :  410.     C.  161. 

How  dare  we   go  without  a  reverent  pause,  A  growing  less 

unfit  for  heaven  ?     SouVs  Tr.  2  :  341.     C.  291. 
This  recreative  pause  and  breathing-while.     R.  and  B.  3  :  345. 
C.  550. 
Paved.      paved   all    too   fine   For   human    footsteps'   smirch. 

Bad  D.  III.  6  :  398  ;  7  :  21.     C.  990. 
Pay.     Prophet's  pay  with  Christians,  now  as  in  the  Jews'  age, 

Still  is  —  stoning.     Pietro  6  :  168.     C.  899. 
Peace.     Here  we  've  got  peace  ;  and  aghast  I  'm  Caught  think- 
ing war  the  true  pastime.     Glove  2  :  247.     C.  256. 
I  tried   peace  :    did  that  promise,  when  peace   failed,   Strife 

should  not  follow?     ^ouZ's  Tr.  2 :  34-5.     C.  292. 
All  the  jar  stops,  and  there  is  peace  at  once  !     Luria  2  :  399. 

C.  314. 
All  outside  is  lone  field,  moon  and  such  peace  —  Flowing  in, 

filling  up  as  with  a  sea.     it.  and  B.  3  :  245.     C.  512. 
the  breadth  before  of  lapsing  peace.  Where  broods  the  halcyon 

and  the  fish  leaps  free.     R.  and  B.  3  :  455.     C.  593. 
Are  we  not  here  to  learn  the  good  of  peace  through  strife, 
Of  love  through  hate,  and  reach  knowledge  by  ignorance  ? 
FiJine4.-A2S.     C.  727. 
Ah,  could  our  people  know  what  Peace  implies  !   Ari.  A.  5 :124. 

C.  638. 
Plenty  and  pastime  wait  on  peace,  not  war  !     Ari.  A.  5  :  131. 

C.  641. 
Nav,  after  earth,  comes  peace  Born  out  of  life-long  battle  ? 

Ber.  de  M.  6  :  296.     C.  952. 
Bring  our  inside  strife  to  peace  Ere  we  wage,  on  the  outside, 
war  !     Rev.  6  :  435  ;  7  :  104.     C.  1005. 
Peaceful.     I  am  grown  peaceful  as  old  age  to-night.     I  regret 
little,  I  would  change  still  less.     Andrea  4:  :  88.     C.  348. 
The  people  are  as  peaceful  as  the  place.     Red  Cott.  5  :  14. 
C.  741. 
Peacock.     Shall  I  wed  wife,  and  all  my  days  rejoice  I  gained 

the  peacock  ?     Joch.  6  :  220.     C.  922. 
Peaks.     All  the  peaks  soar,  but  one  the  rest  excels.     Gram.  Fun. 

2  :  310.     C.  279. 

Pearl,     is  it  a  pearl  .  .  .  That  great  round  glory  of  pellucid 
stufif,   A  fish  secreted  round  a  grain  of  grit  !     R.  and  B. 

3  :  113.     C.  459. 

Fighting-cock-fashion,  —  thev  had  filched  a  pearl  From  dung- 
heap.     R.  and  B.  3  :  430.  '  C.  583. 


184  PEARL  —  PERFECT 

Pearl.     In  the  core  of  one  pearl  all  the  shade  and  the  shine  of 

the  sea.     Sum.  Bon.  6  -.393 ;  1  -.11.     C.  988. 

Tlirougb  the  power  in  a  pearl.     Pearl  6  :  393  ;  7  :  12.     C.  988. 

Peccadillos,     peccadillos  incident  to  youth,  Especially  youth 

iiigh-born  ;  for  youth  means  love.   R.  and  B.  3  :24.    C.  424. 

Pedants.     Plague   take  all  your  pedants,  say  I  !     Sih.  Scltaf. 

2  :  10.     C.  167. 
Pedestrian,    a  sage  pedestrian  picks  his  way.    Red  Cott.  5  :  27. 

C.  746. 
Peerless.     Nature's  law  —  Given  the  peerless  woman,  certainly 
Somewhere  shall  be  the  peerless  man  to  match  !     Inn  A. 
5  :  264.     C.  782. 
Pelf.    Must  a  game  be  played  for  the  sake  of  pelf  ?   Stat,  and  B. 
2  :  328.     C.  286. 
—  pelf  Smoothens  the  human  mudlark's  lodging.     Geo.  B.  D. 
6:319.     C.  961. 
Pen.     By  his  wife's  pen,  guided  from  end  to  end,  As  if  it  had 
been  just  so  much  Chinese.     R.  and  B.  3  :85.     C.  447. 
Pen,  truce  to  further  gambols  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  289.     C.  529. 
men  War-wearied  get  amusement  from  that  pen  And  pajjer 

we  grow  sick  of.     Forgiv.  5  :  365.     C.  819. 
crowquill  calligraph  His  pen  goes  blotting,  blurring,  as  an  ox 
Tramples  a  tiower-bed.     Tico  Poets  6  :  85.     C.  862. 
Pens,     and  pens,  good  Lord,  Who  knows  if  you  drive  them  or 

they  drive  you  ?     Sludge  4  :  226.     C.  399. 
Penetrate.     And  whoso  desires  to  penetrate  Deeper,  must  dive 

by  the  spirit-sense.     House  5  :  337.     C.  809. 
Pennon,     how  the  pennon  from  its  dome.  Frenetic  to  be  free, 

makes  one  red  stretch  for  home  !     Fifine  4  :  385.     C.  703. 
Penury.      No !     penury,    inertness     and     grimace.   In    some 
strange  sort,  were  the   land's   portion.     Childe  R.  2  :  332. 
C.  287. 
(in  the  fortitude  of  years  fifteen,   So  good  a  pedagogue  is 
penury.)     R.  and  B.  3  :  149.     C.  473. 
People.     The  People  for  us  —  were  the  People  for  us  !     Straf. 
1  :  142.     C.  55. 
And   yet   the   people   grew,   the   people    grew.     Grew  ever. 

Sor.  1 :  266.     C.  103. 
A  people  is  but  the  attempt  of  many  To  rise  to  the  completer 
life  of  one.     Luria  2  :  403.     C.  315. 
Perdition,     would  you  send  A  soul  straight  to  perdition,  dying 

frank  An  atheist  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  454.     C.  592. 
Perfect.     They   are    perfect  —  how    else  ?     they    shall   never 
change  :  We  are  faulty  —  why  not  ?  we  have  time  in  store. 
Old  Pict.  2  :  40.     C.  177. 
thou  wouldst  be  perfect,  white  and  clean  Outside  as  inside, 

soul  and  soul's  demesne.     Any  Wife  2  :68.     C.  188. 
perfect   brow,    And    perfect   eyes,   and    more   than    perfect 
mouth.     Andrea  4  :  85.     C.  347. 


PERFECT  — PHILOSOPHY  185 

Perfect.     Perfect  I  call  Thy  plan :  .  .  .  Maker,  remake,  com- 
plete, —  I  trust  what  Thou   shalt  do  !      Ben  Ezra  4  :  187. 
C.  384. 
Blazed  in  the  full-blown  glory  of  her  Spring.     Peerlessly  per- 
fect, form  and  face.     Red  Cott.  5  :  35.     C.  749. 

Perfection.     What's  come  to  perfection  perishes.     Old  Pict. 
2  :  40.     C.  177. 
An  hour's  perfection  can't  recur.     Dls  Al.  ^-.llo.     C.  380. 
So  all  whereat  perfection  stays  ?     Appear.  5  :  351.     C.  814. 
the  dear  Fleshly  perfection  of  the  human  shape.      Fr.   Fu. 
6  :  329.     C.  965. 

Perfection's.  Reached,  one  may  say,  Perfection's  haven  quite, 
And  there  cast  anchor.     Two  Poets  6  :  93.     C.  865. 

Perfections,  so  perfections  tire,  —  Whiten  to  wanness,  till  .  .  . 
let  others  note  The  ever-new  invasion  !  Chas.  A.  G:  360. 
C.  977. 

Perfidy.  I  came,  thank  God  for  it,  To  learn  how  far  such  per- 
fidy can  go  !     Straf.  1 :  171.     C.  65. 

Performance.  As  the  power,  expect  performance  !  God's  be 
God's  as  mine  is  mine  !     La  S.  G  :  64.     C.  854. 

Perhaps,     the  ancient  idol,  .  .  .  The  grand  Perhaps  !     Bishop 

B.  4  :  96.     C.  351. 

Perplexed.  What  was  there  here  should  have  perplexed  your 
wit  For  a  wink  of  the  owl-eyes  of  you  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  229. 

C.  505. 

Peter's.  We  place  it  in  Peter's  time  when  hearts  were  great 
not  small,  Germanized,  Frenchified.    Ivltn  6  :  131.    C.  881. 

Petrifactions.  You  too  are  petrifactions  of  a  kind  :  Move  not 
a  muscle  that  shows  mercy.     R.  and  B.  3  :  452.     C.  592. 

Petrify.  You  steep  the  substance,  you  would  lubricate,  In  wa- 
ters that  but  touch  to  peti-ify  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  452.     C.  592. 

Petty.     Here  did  a  petty  nature  split  on  rock  Of  vulgar  wants 
predestinate  for  such.     R.  and  B.  3  :  155.     C.  476. 
Petty  feat  and  yet  prodigious.     La  S.  6  :  54.     C.  849. 

Petulant,  petulant  speeches,  inconsiderate  acts,  Xow  over- 
hazard,  overcaution  now.     Luria  2  :  365.     C.  300. 

Pheidias.  Ah,  too  high  my  fancy-fliglit !  Pheidias,  forgive, 
and  Zeuxis  bear  with  me.     Ari.  ^4.5: 165.     C.  654. 

Pliilosopher's.  A  philosopher's  life  is  spent  in  discovering 
that,  of  the  half-dozen  truths  he  knew  when  a  child,  such 
an  one  is  a  lie.     SouVs  Tr.  2  :  354.     C.  296. 

Philosophic.  The  philosophic  mind  .  .  .  Smilingly  knows 
.  .  •  sits  Waiting  till  old  things  go  and  new  arrive.  R. 
and  B.  3  :  326.     C.  542. 

Philosophy,  to  roll  under  his  tongue  this  sweeter  morsel 
still,  —  the  feeling  that,  through  immense  philosophy,  he 
does  not  feel,  he  rather  thinks,  above  you  and  me  !  Soul's 
Tr.  2  :  350.     C.  295. 


186 


PHILOSOPHY  —  PINES 


Philosophy.      A  man   is  wedded   to   philosophy,  Married   to 

statesmanship  ;  a  man  is  old.     R.  and  B.  3  :  331.     C.  544. 
Phrase.     Thus  —  in   the   antique    penman's   very   phrase.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  356.     C.  554. 
a  concliidinsj  phrase  So  silver-soft,  yet  penetrative  too.     Red 

Cott.  5  :  64.     C.  760. 
Phryne.     Never  was  knock-knee  known  nor  splay-foot  found 

In  Phyrne.     R.  and  B.  3  :  324.     C.  542. 
Physic,     in  vain  Had  Physic  striven  her  best  against  the  spite 

Of  fell  disease.     Joch.  6  :  212.     C.  819. 
Physician.     I  heard  Himself  prescribe,  That  great  Physician, 

and  dared   lance  the  core  Of   the  bad  ulcer.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  180.     C.  486. 
What  physician  shrinks  From  needful  contact  with  a  corpse  ? 

Forgiv.  5  :  364.     C.  819. 
Pick.     AYe  want  the  pick  o'  the  earth  to  practise  with.  Not  its 

offscouring,  halt   and  deaf  and  blind.     R.  and  B.  3  :  196. 

C.  492. 
Pickthank.     To   hear   that   pickthank,   further   his   designs ! 

King  C.l-.'ddo.     C.  156. 
Pictures.     Their  pictures  are  left  to  the  mercies  still  Of  deal- 
ers and  stealers,  Jews  and  the  English.     Old  Pict.  2  :  43. 

C.  178. 
Picturesque,     homely  sward  And  not  the  rock-rough  pictur- 
esque for  me  !     Bifur.  5  :  347.     C.  812. 
Hand-write  what 's  legible  yet  picturesque.     Tivo  Poets  6  :  98. 

C.  867. 
Pilgrimage,     in   its   pilgrimage    O'er   old   unwandered   waste 

ways  of  the  world.     R.  and  B.  3  :  17.     C.  421. 
Evil  and  brief  hath  been  my  pilgrimage.     St.  Prax.   4  :  91. 

C.  349. 
Pillar.     By  Sebzevar  a  certain  pillar  stands  So  aptly  that  its 

gnomon  tells  the  hour.     Pillar  6  :  209.     C.  941. 
Pilotage.    You  take  ship-carpentry  for  pilotage,  Stop  rat-holes, 

while  a  sea  sweeps  through  the  breach.     R.  and  B.  3  :  284. 

C.  527. 
Pine.      Clearance   and    clearance   break   the   else-unconquered 

growth  Of  pine.     Ivbn  6  :  131.     C.  881. 
each  village  death-begirt  By  wall  and  wall  of  pine  —  unprobed 

undreamed  abyss.     Ivan  6  :  131.     C.  881. 
Quiet  in   its  cleft   broods  —  what   the  after-age  Knows  and 

names  a  pine,  a  nation's  heritage.     Touch  6  :  191.     C.  910. 
Pine-trees.     One  by  one,  row  after  row,  Up  and  up  the  pine- 
trees  go.     Flight  2 -.289.     C.  271. 
Pine--wrood.     Down  the  grass  path  gray  with  dew,  Under  the 

pine-wood,  blind  with  boughs.     Pippa  1  :  332.     C.  130. 
Pines.     The  herded  pines  commune  and  have  deep  thoughts. 

Para.  1  :  118.     C.  47. 


PINES  — PLAY  187 

Pines.     Ah,  pines,  how  straight  you  grow,  Nor  bend  one  pity- 
ing  branch,   true   breed   of    brutal   snow  !      lean   0  :  133. 
C.  882. 
the  pines,  Mountains  and  valleys  mingling  made  one  mass  Of 
black  with  void  black  heaven.     Pan  6  :  188.     C.  909. 
Pioneer.    As  who  must  grub  and  grab,  play  pioneer.   Red  Cott. 

5  :  21.     C.  744. 
Pits,     my   fellows  !  Pits  of  ignorance  —  to   fill,  and  heaps  of 

prejudice  —  to  level.     Pietro  G  :  175.     C.  903. 
Pitch.     I  took  its  print  as  pitch  Takes  what  it  cools  beneath. 

Ivan  6  :  137.     C.  884. 
Pity,     for   God's   sake,    He  who   is   Pity.     R.  and  B.  3:382. 
C.  564. 
somehow  rather  urged  To  pity  than  disgust.     Fifine  4  :  428. 

C.  727. 
What  means  the  sad  slow  silver  smile  above  My  clay  but  pity, 

pardon  ?     Numph.  5  :  348.     C.  813. 
As  night  needs  day,  as  shine  needs  shade,  so  good  Needs  evil  : 
how  were  pity  understood  Unless  by  pain  ?    Fr.  Fu.  6  :  339. 
C.  969. 
Not  one  spark  Of  pity  in  that  steel-gray  glance.     Ger.  de  L. 
6 : 349.     C.  972. 
Place.     The  place  is  silent  and  aware  ;  It  has  had  its  scenes, 
its  joys  and  crimes.     By  Fire.  2  :  62.     C.  186. 
We  V    Why,  where  's  my  place  But  by  her  side,  and  where 

yours  but  by  mine  ?     A  Blot  2  :  165.     C.  225. 
That  such  a  cloud  should  break,  such  trouble  be,  Ere  a  mau 
settle,  soul  and  body,  down  Into  his  true  place  and  take 
rest  forever  !     Luria  2  :  398.     C.  313. 
Plain,      one   vast   red   drear   burnt-up   plain.      Flight   2  :  289. 
C.  271. 
Nothing  but  plain  to  the  horizon's  bound.     Cliilde  R.  2  :  332. 

C.  287. 
Still,  a  few  daylight  doses  of  plain  life.  Cock-crow  and  spar- 
row-chirp.    R.  and  B.  3  :250.     C.  514. 
Plain-speaking,     plain-speaking:  'tis  a  trick  I  keep.     Straf. 

1  :  140.     C.  54. 
Plants.     Like  plants  in  mines  which  never  saw  the  sun,  But 
dream  of  him,  and  guess  where  he  may  be.  And  do  their 
best  to  climb  and  get  to  him.     Para.  1:  121.     C.  48. 
God  plants  us  where  we  grow.     R.  and  B.  3  :  243.     C.  511. 
Plausibility.     Tell  her  own  story  her  own  way,  and  turn  My 

plausibility  to  nothingness  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  441.     C.  587. 
Plausibilities.     Not  absolutely  formed  to  be  the  dupe  Of  shal- 
low plausibilities  alone.     Para.  1:66.     C.  27. 
Play.     Each  incident  of  this  strange  human  play  Pri^-ily  acted 
on   a  theatre,   That  seemed    secure  from  every  gaze  but 
God's.     R.and  B.^:^1Q.     C.  598. 


188  PLEA  — POET 

Plea.     A  parlous  plea,  Put  in  with  noticeable  effect.     R.  and  B. 

3:7.     C.  417. 
Pleas.     Oh,  pleas  of  all  sorts  shall  abound,  be  sure.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  401.     C.  571. 
Plead.     This  may  forsooth  plead  dinned  ear,  jaded  sense.  The 

vice  o'  the   watcher  who  bides  near  the  bell.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  3G6.     C.  557. 

Pleading,  doth,  all-unheard,  My  pleading  fail  to  move  thee  ? 
Joch.  6  :  216.     C.  920. 

Please.     If  thou  shalt  please,  dear  God,  if  thou  shalt  please  ! 
Para.  1 :  107.     C.  43. 
her  wish  To  please  me  outstrips  in  its  subtlety  My  power  of 
being  pleased.     A  Blot  2  :  148.     C.  218. 

Pleasure.     Enable  man  to  wring,  from  out  all  pain.  All  pleas- 
ure for  a  common  heritage.     R.  and  B.  3  :  387.     C.  566. 
For,  pleasure  being  the  sole  good  in  the  world,  Any  one's  pleas- 
ure turns  to  some  one's  pain.     R.  and  B.  3  :415.     C.  577. 
Get  pleasure,  'scape   pain,  —  give  your  preference  To  the  im- 
mediate good,  for  time  is  brief.    R.  and  B.  3  :421.    C.  579. 
Pleasure  must  succeed  to  pleasure,  else  past  pleasure  turns  to 

pain.     LaS.  6: 60.     C.  852. 
Pleasure    with    profit   happily   combined.     Two  Poets   6  :  84. 
C.  861. 

Pleasures.     Earth's   tribute-money,  pleasures  great  and  small. 
Red  Cott.  5  :  77.     C.  765. 
I  know  my  own  appointed  patch  i'  the  world,  What  pleasures 
me  or  pains  there.     Bean-St.  6  :  275.     C.  94.3. 

Pleurisy.  —  Virtue  in  a  chafe  should  change  her  linen  quick, 
Lest  pleurisy  get  start  of  providence.  R.  and  B.  3  :  137. 
C.  469. 

Plod.  I  prepare  to  plod  on  my  old  way.  And  somewhat 
wearily,  I  must  confess  !     Colomhe  2  :  230.     C.  250. 

Plot.  Something  is  in  the  air.  Under  the  earth,  some  plot 
against  my  peace.     R.  and  B.  3  :  52.     C.  434. 

Ploughshare.  Say  but  just  this  :  '  We  praise  one  helpful 
whom  we  call  The  Holder  of  the  Ploughshare.'  Ecket. 
6  :  154.     C.  893. 

Poem.     You  are  a  poem,  though  your  poem  's  naught.     Trans. 

4  :  58.     C.  336. 

my  poem  :  masticate  Sense,  sight,  and  song  there  !     Digest 
these,  and  I  praise  your  peptics'  state.     Prol.  Fer.  6  :  240. 
C.  929. 
Poems.     Thy  life  stays  in  the  poems  men  shall  sing,  The  pic- 
tures men  shall  study.     Cleon  4  :  118.     C.  359. 
the  poems  in  mv  soul,  Tlie  passionate  faith,  the  pride  of  sacri- 
fice.    In  aB.^:  143.     C.  368. 
Poet,     one  jarred  against  another  life  ;   The   Poet  thwarting 
hopelessly  the  Man.     Sor.  1 :  230.     C.  89. 


POET  — POETRY  189 

Poet.     "For  I"  —  so  I  spoke  —  "am  a  poet:  Human  nature, 

—  behooves  that  I  know  it  !  "     Glove  2  :  250.     C.  257. 
poet  ?     Well,  Your  brains  beat  into  rhythm,  you  tell  What 

we  felt  only.     Last  Ride  2  :  280.     C.  2G8. 
A   poet   never   dreams  :    We   prose-folk   always   do.     Fijine 

4  :  422.     C.  724. 
Who   is  a  poet   needs   must   apprehend   Alike   both   speech 

and   thoughts  which   prompt   to  speak.      Red  Cott.  5  :  75. 

C.  765. 
No  brow  will  ache  because  with  mop  and  mow  He  gibes  my 

poet  !     Ari.  A.5:  102.     C.  629. 
There   wanted   not   a   poet   to   dispense   Song's   remedy  for 

spleen-fits  all  and  some.      Two  Poets  6  :  83.     C.  861. 
A  poet  born  and  bred,  his  very  sire  A  poet  also.      Tico  Poets 

6  :  83.     C.  861. 
Poet-soul.     The    world    contented    shifts    With    counterfeits 

enough  .  .  .  ere  it  can  extort  Its  poet-soul.      Sor.  1:227. 

C.88. 
Poet's,     ever  'mid  the  whirling  fear,  Let,  through  the  tumult, 

break  the  poet's  face  Radiant.     Two  Poets  6  :  112.     C.  873. 
all  in  vain  Strives  poet's  power  for  outlet  when  the  push  Is 

lost  upon  a  barred  and  bolted  gate  Of  painter's  impotency. 

Fr.  Fu.  6  :  329.     C.  965. 
Poets,     how  vain  seems  e'en  success  —  The  vaunted  influence 

poets  have  o'er  men  !     Pau.  1  :  13.     C.  7. 
White  brows,  lit  up  with  glory  ;  poets  all !  Para.  1  :  60.     C. 

25. 
poets  know  the  dragnet's  trick,  Catching  the  dead,  if  fate 

denies  the  quick.  And  shaming  her.     Sor.  1 :  194.     C.  75. 
Ah,  that  brave  Bounty  of  poets,  the  one  royal  race  That  ever 

was,  or  will  be,  in  this  world  !     Balau.  4  :  322.     C.  625. 
Poets  that  plague  us  with  lewd  ditties.  And  Painters  that 

pester  with  nudities  !     Pacch.  5  :  320.     C.  803. 
'T  is   pity   poets   need    historians'   skill.     Dan.    Bar.    6 :  303. 

C.  955. 
No,  no :  we  poets   go  not  back  at  all.     Ger.  de  L.  6 :  347. 

C.  972. 
Poetry.     And  don't  you  deal  in  poetry,  make-believe.  And  the 

white  lies  it  sounds  like  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  11.     C.  418. 
Now,  poetry  in  some  rank  blossom-burst,  Now,  pi'ose.     R. 

and  B.  3:168.     C.  481. 
All  poetry  is  difficult  to  read.     R.  and  B.  3  :  263.     C.  519. 
hearts  are  hearts.  And  poetry  is  power.   Balau.  4  :  268.    C.  604. 
We  substitute,  in  a  fashion.  For  heaven  —  poetry.     Prol.  Fi- 

fine  4  :  383.     C.  702. 
new  poetry  drinks  raw.     Ari.  A.^:  121.     C.  637. 
moderate  increase  Of  songs  and  sonnets,  madrigals,  and  much 

Rhyming  thought  poetry.     Two  Poets  6  :  83.     C.  861. 


190  POETRY  — POOR 

Poetry,     his  poetry  that  's  —  Oh,  All  so  learned  and  so  wise 

Aii:l  deserving  of  a  prize  !     Tico  Poets  0  :  115.     C.  874. 
your  poetry  I  dare   not  give,  Purpling  too  much   my  mere 

gray  argument.     Chris.  Sm.  6  :  316.     C.  960. 
Poetry  discerns,  Painting  is  'ware  of  passion's  rise  and  fall. 

Chas.A.Q-.Zb'd.     C.  <J76. 
Poignancy.      There 's    poignancy    enough    When    what    one 

parted  \vith,  a  minute  since,  Alive  and  happy,  is  returned  a 

wreck.     Red  Cott.  5  :  83.     C.  768. 
Point.     A   nice   point  !     Which    brownness  is  least   black,  — 

decide  who  can,  Wager-by-battle-of-cheating  !     R.  and  B. 

3  :  120.     C.  462. 
Not  one  word  more  from  the  point  now  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  194. 

C.  491. 
Poison-plague.     O  gorgeous  poison-plague,  on  thee  no  hearts 

are  set !     Fifine  4  :  389.     C.  705. 
Poisoned,     whoso  sucks  a  poisoned  wound  Envenoms  his  own 

veins  !     Pau.  1:1.     C.  2. 
Pole,     the  Pole  —  that  Salem,  every  Jew  Helps  to  build  up. 

Joch.  6  :  215.     C.  920. 
Politics.     Politics  ?     Spend   your   life,  to  spare  the   world's  : 

Improve  each  unit  by  some  particle  Of  joy  the  more,  de- 
teriorate  the   orb  Entire,  vour   own  :   poor  profit,  dismal 

loss  !     Red  Cott.  5  :  48.     C.'754. 
Politicians'.     For  fifty  politicians'  frosty  work.  One  poet's  ash 

proved  ample  and  to  spare.     Ari.  A.  5  :  106.     C.  631. 
Policy,     nor  is    my   policy   Your    poUcy.      King    C.    1 :  400. 

C.  158. 
Pompilia.      — Francesca   Camilla   Yittoria   Angela   Pompilia 

Compariui,  —  laughable  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  237.     C.  508. 
Abate,  —  Cardinal,  —  Christ,  —  Maria,  —  God,  .  .    .   Pompi- 
lia, will   you  let  them  murder   me  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  457. 

C.  594. 
Poniards,     the   poniards   with   the   double   prong,    Horn-like, 

when  tines  make  bold  the  antlered  buck.    R.  and  B.  3  :  305. 

C.  535. 
Pontiff.     The  Pontiff,  as  the  Kaisers  understand,  One  snake- 
like cursed  of  God  to  love  the  ground.    Sor.  1 :  268.     C.  104. 
Poor,     plead  The  cause  o'  the  poor,  the  friends  (of  old-world 

faith)  Who  lie  in  tribulation.     R.  and  B.  3  :  313.     C.  538. 
My  being  poor  was  a  by-circumstance,  Miscalculated  piece  of 

untowardness.     R.  and  B.  3  :  119.     C.  461. 
I  stand  forth  as  the  poor  man's  advocate.     R.  and  B.  3  :  313. 

C.  538. 
Is  poor,  who  yet  could  deftly  play-ofE  wealth  :    Straitened, 

whose  limbs  are  restless  till  at  large.     R.  and  B.  3 :  365. 

C.  557. 
Poor  as  you  please,  but  cleanly  all  and  care-free.     Bean-F. 

6:403;  7:36.     C.  992. 


POPE  — POWER  191 

Pope.     Pope   Innocert  the    Twelfth,   Simple,   sagacious,  mild 

vet  resolute,   With  prudence,  probity,     li.  and  B.   3  :  28. 

C.  425. 
the  Pope  was  kind,  From  his  youth  up,  reluctant  to  take  life, 

If  mei'cy  might  be  just.     R.  and  B.'d  -.1.     C.  il7. 
There  's  a  strange  Pope,  —  't  is  said,  a  priest  who  thinks.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  199.     C.  493. 
The  Pope,  you  know,  is  Neapolitan  And  relishes  a  sea-side 

simile.     R.  and  B.  3  :  328.     C.  543. 
On  earth  I  never  took  the  Pope  for  God,  In  heaven  I  shall 

scarce  take  God  for  the  Pope.     R.  and  B.  3  :  456.     C.  593. 
That  no  worse  blessing  befall  the  Pope,  Turn'd  sick  at  last  of 

to-day's  buffoonery.     Chris.-Eve  4  :  30.     C.  326. 
the    Pope   Conniver   at   Francesco    Cenci's   guilt.      Cenciaja 

5  :  368.     C.  821. 
Poppy-milk.     Ears  plugged,  eyes  gummed  together,  palate, 

tongue  And  teeth  one  mud-paste  made  of  poppy-milk.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  53.     C.  435. 
Poppy's.      the    poppy's   red    effrontery  .  .  .  Autumn   spoiled 

their  fleering  .  .  ,  And,  turbanless,  a  coarse  brown  rattling 

crane  Lay  bare.     Sor.  1:  209.     C.  81. 
Populace,     the  rough  lesson-lacking  populace  Who  now  and 

then,  forsooth,  must  right  their  wrongs  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  408. 

C.  574. 
Portion.     God  !     I  am  upon  his  side,  come  weal  or  woe.     His 

portion  shall  be  mine.     Para.  1  :  111.     C.  44. 
Portions.     'T  is  willed  so,  —  that  Man's  life  be  lived,  first  to 

last,  Up  and  down,  through  and  through  —  not  in  portions. 

Apol.  and  F.  6  :  293.     C.  951. 
Portrait,     why,  trait  for  trait.  Was  ever  portrait  limned  so  like 

the  life  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  293.     C.  530. 
That 's  not  so  much  the  portrait  as  the  man  !      it.  and  B. 

3  :  293.     C.  530. 
Or  else,  there  's  no  wife  in  the  case,  But  the  portrait 's  queen 

of  the  place.     Likeness  4  :  220.     C.  396. 
Portraits.     Some  people  hang  portraits  up  In  a  room  where 

they  dine  or  sup.     Likeness  4  :  220.     C.  396. 
Posset.     I  '11  posset  and  cosset  them,  nothing  loth.  Hencefor- 
ward with  nettle-broth  !     Epil.  Pacch.  5  :  394.     C.  829. 
Potter.     Time's  wheel  runs  back  or  stops  :    Potter  and  clay 

endure.     Ben  Ezra  4  :  190.     C.  385. 
Pounce.      So,   bustle!      Pounce    on    opportunity!      Ari.    A. 

5  :  121.     C.  637. 
Poverty,     catch  in  the  act  pretentious  poverty  At  its  wits'  end 

to  keep  appearance  up.     R.  and  B.  3  :  44.     C.  431. 
For  poverty,  he  had  an  open  hand.     Red  Cott.  5  :  17.     C.  743. 
Powrer.     I  gazed  on  power  till  I  grew  blind.     Power  ;  I  could 

not  take  my  eyes  from  that.     Para.  1: 120.     C.  47. 


192  POWER  — PRAISE 

Po'wer.     Doubt  that  Thy  power  can  fill  the  heart  that   Thy 

power  expands  ?     Abt  V.4::  184.     C.  383. 
.    Power  ?  't  is  just  the  main  assumption  reason  most  revolts  at  ! 
La^S.  6  :  66.     C.  854. 
Power  is  power,  .  .  .  and  still   Marks  a  man,  —  God's  gift 

magiiific.     Cllve  6  :  156.     C.  893. 
as  is  gold  to  spelter  So  is  power  .  .  .  paramount  to  wealth. 

Pietro  6  :  176.     C.  903. 
if  power  too  long  suppressed  Broke  loose  and  maddened,  as 

the  vulgar  guessed.     Chris.  Sm.  6  :  315.     C.  960. 
power  Demands  some  hardier  wrappage  to  embrace  Robuster 

heart-beats.     Geo.  B.  D.Q:  319.     C.  961. 
Power,  once   plain   Proved    Power,  —  let  on   Power  devolve 
Good's  right  to   co  -  equal  reign  !      Rev.  6  :  437  ;   7  :  107. 
C.  1006. 
I  have  faith  such  end  shall  be  :  From  the  first,  Power  was 

—  I  knew.     Rev.  6 :  439  ;  7  :  111.     C.  1006. 
Where  the  strange  and  new  have  birth,  And  Power  comes 
full  in  play.     Rev.  6  :  440  ;  7  :  112.     C.  1007. 
Povrer's.     As  Power's  display,  the   same   Be  Good's  —  praise 
forth  shall  flow  Unisonous  in  acclaim  !    Rev.  6  :  438  ;  7  :  109. 
C.  1006. 
Powers,     powers,  that  faiu   Else  would   soar,  condemned   to 
grovel,  groundlings  through  the  fleshly  chain.     La  S.  6  :  61. 
C.  852. 
Practise.     'T  is  one  thing  to  know,  and  another  to  practise. 

Chris.-Eve  4: -.24:.     C.  324:. 
Prado.     Let 's  to  the  Prado  and  make  the  most  of  time.     How 

it  S.     4  :  61.     C.  337. 
Praise.     Much  they  reck  of  your  praise  and  you  !     Old  Pict. 

2  :  38.     C.  176. 

where  vour  praise  might  yield  returns,  And  a  handsome  word 
or  two  give  help.     Old  Pict.  2  :  38.     C.  176. 

praise,  I  have  been  used  to  slight  perhaps.  Seems  scarce  so 
easily  dispensed  with  now.     Luria  2  :  380.     C.  306. 

And  the  world's  praise  or  blame  runs  rillet-wise  Off  the 
broad   back   and    brawny   breast,   we   know !     R.   and  B. 

3  :  389.     C.  566. 

But,  for  one  prize,  best  meed  of  mightiest  man.  Arch-object 
of  ambition,  —  earthly  praise.     R.  and  B.  3  :  472.     C.  599. 

With  heaven's  gold  gates  about  to  ope.  With  friends'  praise, 
gold-like,  lingering  still.     Gold  Hair  4  :  169.     C.  378. 

praise  which,  in  the  proffer,  mocks  the  praised  By  sly  admix- 
ture of  the  blameworthy.     Ari.  A.  5  :168.     C.  655. 

Praise  is  deeper  than  the  lips.     Herve  5  :  357.     C.  816. 

On  earth  I  confess  an  itch  for  the  praise  of  fools  —  that  's 
Vanity.     Sol.  and  B.  6  :  202.     C.  914. 

Love  is  praise.  And  praise  is  love  !     Pillar  6  :  269.     C.  941. 


PRAISE  — PRECONCERTS  193 

Praise.    Ask  not  one  least  word  of  praise  !    Ep'd.  Pillar  6  :  271. 

C.  941. 
more  careless  whoso  reads  may  praise  Than  late  when  he  who 

praised   and   read  and   wrote  Was  .  .  .  the  selfsame  me. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  31.     C.  427. 
Praised.     Yet,  praised,  Remember  who  was  first  to  promise 

praise.     Luria  2 :  372.     C.  303. 
What  is  writ  Is  writ :  they  've  praised  me,  there  's  an  end  of 

it  !     Tivo  Poets  6  :  109.     C.  871. 
Prank,     what  if  the  whole  prove  a  prank  o'  the  pen,  Flight  of 

the  fancy.     R.  and  B.  3  :  169.     C.  482. 
Prattle.     —  if  The  brow  seem  over-pensive  and  the  lip  'Gin 

lag  and  lose  the  prattle  lightsome  late.     R.  and  B.  3  :  335. 

C.  546. 
Prayed.     The  man  sprang  to  his  feet,  Stood  erect,  caught  at 

God's  skirts,  and  prayed  !     Instans  2  :  242.     C.  255. 
Prayer,     all  her  sad  life  long   Never  before  successful  in  a 

prayer.     R.  and  B.  3  :  68.     C.  441. 
Which  seems  to  have  been  about  the  single  prayer  She  ever 

put  up,  that  was  granted  her.     it.  and  B.  3 :  138.     C.  469. 
read  the  little  prayer  To  Raphael,  proper  for  us  travellers  ! 

R.  and  B.Z  ■.•2.11.     C.  501. 
The  amazed  look,  all  one  insuppressive  prayer.     R.  and  B. 

3 : 425.     C.  581. 
Now  did  a  beggar  ,  .  .  lame  .  .  .  recover  use  of  leg.  Through 

prayer  of  Guido.     R.  and  B.   3  :  461.     C.  595. 
waxed  importunate  in  prayer  —  Folly's  old  fashion  when  its 

seed  bears  fruit.     Balau.  4  :  279.     C.  608. 
Prayers.     This  time,  the  foolish  prayers  were  done  with,  right 

Used  might,  and  solemnized  the  sport  at  once.     it.  and  B. 

3  :  274.     C.  523. 
Your  fawningest  of  prayers,  your  frightfullest  Of  curses  — 

neither  would  avail.     i?m  A.  5  :  297.     C.  795. 
Preach.     'T  is  I  preach  while  the  hour-glass  runs  and  runs  ! 

R.  and  B.  3  :  437.     C.  586. 
Preacher.      First,    the    preacher    speaks   through    his    nose  : 

Second,   his   gesture   is   too   emphatic.      Chris.-Eve   4 :  29. 

C.  326. 
Precedents.      "  Beside,    the    precedents,    the    authorities  ! " 

From  both  at  once  a  cry  with  an  echo,  that  !     R.  and  B. 

3:6.     C.  416. 
Precious,     the  precious  means  the  rare.  And  not  the  absolute 

in  all  good  save  surprise.     Fifine  4  :  425.     C.  725. 
The  polisher  needs  precious  stone  no  less  Than  precious  stone 

needs  polisher.     Inn  A.  5  :  252.     C.  777. 
Precocious,     thwart  No   enterprising  soul's  precocious  start 

Before  the  general  march  !     Sor.  1  :  314.     C.  122. 
Preconcerts.      See  how  the  strong  aggressor,  bad  and  bold, 


194  PREDESTINATION  —  PRIDE 

With    every   vantage,    preconcerts   surprise.      R.    and   B. 

3:371.     C.\>j9. 
Predestination.     (Mark  the  predestination  !)    .   .    .    a   Hand, 

Always  above  mj-  slioidder,  pushed  nie.     li.  and  B.  3:2. 

C.  4l"5. 
Pre-eminency.    Man,  nowise  loth,  Accepts  pre-emiuency.    Fr. 

Fit.  6  :  335.     C.  967. 
Prejudice.     How  penetrate  encrusted  prejudice,  Pierce  igno- 
rance three  generations  thick,     yiri.  A.  6  :  118.     C.  G3G. 
Prelude.     All  my  peaceful  days  Were  just  the  i)relude  to  a  day 

like  this.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  345.     C.  292. 
Premiss.     Neither  premiss  nor  yet  conclusion  here.     R.  and  B. 

3 : 334.     C.  545. 
Present,     the  present  Shall  have  distinct  and  trembling  beauty, 

seen  Beside  that  past's  own  shade.     Para.  1  :  120.     C.  48. 
'mid  this  dance  Of  plastic  circumstance,  This  Present.     Ben 

Ezra  4  :  190.     C.  385. 
I  find  advance  i'  the  main,  and  notably  The  Present  an  im- 
provement on  the  Past.     Prince  H.  4  :  340.     C.  685. 
aghast  Foimd   that  the  Present  intercepts  the  Past.      Dan. 

Bar.  6  :  310.     C.  958. 
Presence.     Her   wise  And    lulling  words   are  yet  about   the 

room,  Her  presence  wholly  poured  upon  the  gloom.     Sor. 

1  :  201.     C.  78. 

I  feel  Your  presence  (smile  not)  through  the  walls,  and  take 

Fresh  heart.     King  V.  1  :  374.     C.  147. 
His  presence  vexes  to  my  very  soul.    King  V.  1  :381.    C.  150. 
A  polished  presence,  a  genteel  manner,  wit  At  will,  and  tact 
at  every  pore  of  you  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  197.     C.  492. 
Press,      press  bold  to  the  tether's  end  Allotted  to   this  life's 

intelligence  !     Pillar  6  :  270.     C.  941. 
Presumptive,     presumptive  guilt  is  weak  I'  the  case  of  nobil- 
ity and  privilege.     R.  and  B.  3  :  142.     C.  471. 
Pretty.     A  pretty  woman  's  worth  some  pains  to  see.     Colombe 

2  :  188.     C.  234. 

Pretty  you  would  not  call  her :  though  perhaps  Attaining  to 
the  ends  of  prettiness.  And  somewhat  more,  suppose  enough 
of  soul.     Red  Cott.  5  :  20.     C.  744. 
Prey.     Kith,  kin  and  generation,  couching  low.  Ever  on  the 

alert  to  pounce  on  prey  ?     Red  Cott.  5  :  88.     C.  770. 
Price.     Thou   wilt   require    At  my  hand   its   price   one   day  ! 
il/eswier.  2:247.     C.  256. 
What  the  price  is,  who  can  say  ?     Mesmer.  2  :  247.     C.  256. 
What  price  should  you  impose,  for  instance,  on  repute.  Good 
fame,  your  own  good  fame.     Fijine  4  :  386.     C.  704. 
Pride.     God  may  take  pleasure  in  confounding  pride  By  hiding 
secrets  with  the  scorned  and  base.     Para.  1  :  50.     C.  21. 
men  who  proudly  clung  To  tlieir  first  fault,  and  withered  in 
their  pride.     Para.  1 :  97.     C.  39. 


PRIDE  —  PRIESTS  105 

Pride.     Too  weak,  for  all  lier  heart's  endeavor,  To  set  its  strug- 
gling passion  free  From  pride.     Porph.  2  :  329.     C.  28(5. 
Till,  'mid  the  jauncing  pride  and  jauntv  port.     R.  and  B. 

3:406.     C.  573. 
such  conclusion  suits  Nowise  the  pride  of  man.    Fifine  4  :  441. 

C.  734. 
A3',  pride  succumbed  to  pride.  Oppression  met  the  oppressor 

and  was  matched.     Ari.  A.  5  :  100.     C.  G29. 
—  if  my  triumph  brought  you   pride,  I  would  grapple  with 

Greek  Plays  till  I  died.     Maivj  W.  6  :  200.     C.  910. 
Circumambient  still,  still  the  poor  human  array,  Pride  and 

revenge  and  hate  and  cruelty.     Ixion  6  :  210.     C.  918. 
Pride's.     Poverty  and  privation  for  pride's  sake.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  154.     C.  47G. 
Priest,     the  stage  where  the  priest  played  his  part,  A  spectacle 

for  angels.     R.  and  B.  3  :  12.     C.  419. 
the  young  frank  personable  priest  ;  Sworn  fast  and  tonsured 

plain  heaven's  celibate.     R.  and  B.  3  :  23.     C.  424. 
A    priest  —  what  else  should   the   consoler  be  ?     R.  and  B. 

3  :  50.     C.  434. 
Or,  since   I  have  a  tonsure  as  you  taunt.   At  Rome,  by  all 

means,  —  priests  to  try  a  priest.     R.  and  B.  3  :55.     C.  436. 
If  as  a  man,  then  much  more  as  a  priest  I  hold  me  bound  to 

help  weak  innocence.     R.  and  B.  3  :  98.     C.  453. 
Next,  let  the  priest  retire — unshent,  unshamed.  Unpunished 

as  for  perpetrating  crime.     R.  and  B.  3  :  99.     C.  453. 
The  perjured  priest,  pink  of  conspirators.     R.  and  B.  3  :  186. 

C.  488. 
priest  and  trained  to  live  my  whole  life  long  On  beauty  and 

splendor,  solely  at  their  source,  God.     R.  and  B.  3:  191. 

C.  490. 
the  yotmg  idle  priest  i'  the  house  With  only  the  devil  to  meet 

there.     R.  and  B.  3  :  208.     C.  497. 
A  priest  is  more  a  woman  than  a  man.     R.  and  B.  3  :  249. 

C.  513. 
The   idle  young  priest  with  naught  else  to  do.     R.  and  B. 

3 : 255.     C.  516. 
He  is  a  priest ;  He  cannot  marrv  ...  I  think  he  would  not 

marry  if  he  could.     R.  and  B.  3  :  278.     C.  525. 
You  find  the  Priest  good  liquor  in  the  main.  But  heady  and 

provocative  of  brawls.     R.  and  B.  3  :  354.     C.  553. 
Priests.     You  think  Priests  just  and  holy  men  !     The  Confess. 

2  :  15.     C.  169. 

Making  as  thev  were  priests,  to  mock  God  more.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  13.     C.  419. 

Vows  can't  change  nature,  priests  are  only  men.     7?.  and  B. 

3  :  24.     C.  424. 
Moreover   priests   are   merely  flesh  and   blood.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  86.     C.  448. 


196 


PRIESTS  — PRIZE 


Priests.     Priests  play  with  women,  maids,  wives,  mothers — ■ 

whv  ?  these  plav  with  men  and  take  them  off  our  hands. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  116.     C.  4G0. 
Regular  priests  they  are,  nor,  hat-like,  'bide  'Twixt  flesh  and 

fowl  with  neither  privilege.     R.  and  B.  3  :  151.     C.  474. 
but  priests  Should  study  passion  ;  how  else  cure  mankind,  .  .  . 

in  passionate  extremes  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  23.5.     C.  508. 
You  serve   God  specially,  as  priests  are  bound.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  269.     C.  521. 
Priestliness.      yet  priestliness  Can  find  a  parallel  to  the  mar- 
riage-bond In  its  own  blessed  special  ordinance.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  159.     C.  477. 
Prime.     Farewell  to  dewiness  and  prime  of  life  !     Remains  the 

rough  determined  day.     R.  and  B.  3  :325.     C.  542. 
Primitive.     Name  me,  a  primitive  religionist  —  As  should  the 

aboriginary  be.     R.  and  B.  Z  i-UQ.     C.  589. 
Primroses,     a  scanty  patch  Of  primroses  too  faint  to  catch  A 

weary  bee.     Para.  1  :  111.     C.  44. 
Prince.     The    prince    had    grinned    and   borne  :    the   citizen 

shrieked.  Summoned  the  neighborhood  to  attest  the  wrong. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  155.     C.  476. 
From  fisher's  drudge  to  Church's  prince  —  it  is  indeed  a  rise. 

Pope  and  iV^.  6  :  402  ;  7:  33.     C.  992. 
Principles,     why  refuse  to  see  that  in  my  present  course  I 

change  no  principles,  only  re-adapt  them  and  more  adroitly  ? 

SouVs  Tr.  2  :  351.     C.  295. 
Print.     Large-lettered  like  hell's  masterpiece  of  print.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  229.     C.  505. 

does  Print  furnish  Truth  wings  ?  The  same  aids  Cause  False- 
hood to  range  just  as  widely.     Fust  6  :  382.     C.  986. 

Printed.  Printed  leasing  and  lies  May  speed  to  the  world's 
farthest  corner.     Fust  6  :  382.     C.  986. 

Printing.  High,  O  Printing,  and  holy  Thy  mission  !  Fust 
6  :  379.     C.  985. 

Prison-bird.  I  —  prison-bird,  with  a  ruddy  strife  At  breast, 
and  a  lip  whence  storm-notes  start.     Prol.  Pacch.  5  :  317. 

C.  802. 

Privilege.  Admit  that  honor  is  a  privilege,  The  question  fol- 
lows, privilege  worth  what  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  153.     C.  475. 

Prize,     nor  grow  mad  to  grasp  At  once  the  prize  long  patient 
toil  should  claim,  Xor  spurn  all  granted  short  of  that.   Para. 
1:57.     C.  24. 
worth  That  a  man  should  strive  and  agonize,  And  taste  a  veri- 
est hell  on  earth  For  the  hope  of  such  a  prize  !     By  Fire. 

2  :  65.     C.  187. 

Claiming   the   main   prize,  not   the   lesser  luck.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  39.     C.  430. 

You  should  have  put  up  with  the  minor  flaw,  Getting  the 
main  prize  of  the  jewel.     R.  and  B.  3  :  119.     C.  461. 


PRIZE  — PROMISE  197 

Prize.     It  gained  no  j)rize  :  yonr  love  be  prize  I  gain  !     Ari.A. 

5:179.     C.  660. 
Probation,     the  probation  was  for  thee,  To  show  thy  soul  the 

earthly    mixed   With   heavenly,   it   must   choose    betwixt. 

Ea^.-bay  4  :  47.     C.  332. 
Probation-space,     life,  time  —  with  all  their  chances,  changes 

—  just  probation-space.     Za  S.  6  :  63.     C.  853. 
Probationary,     a  probationary  soul  that  moved  From  noble- 
ness to  nobleness.     R.  and  B.  3  :  68.     C.  441. 
Probe,     how  sure  they  probe,  —  These  jades,  the  sensitivest 

soft  of  man  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  433.     C.  584. 
Problem.     The  common  problem  ...  Is  —  not  to  fancy  what 

were  fair  in  life  Provided  it  could  be.     Bishop  B.  4  :  93. 

C.  350. 
Product,     product  of  a  lifetime,  wrung  From  each  man  by  an 

adverse  world.     Ari.  A.  o  :160.     C.  652. 
Profession.     What  fool  conjectures  that  profession  means  Per- 
formance ?     Geo.  B.D.6: 320.     C.  962. 
Professors.     Fortune  is  fickle  And  even  professors  fall.    Para. 

1  :  74.     C.  30. 
Profit.    Heedless  of  far  gain,  Greedy  for  quick  returns  of  profit. 

Gra7n.  Fun.  2  :  312.     C.  280. 
And  ponder  the  profit  of  turning  holy  If  not  for  God's,  for 

your  own  sake  solely.     Chris.-Ece  4  :  26.     C.  325. 
Profits.     'T  is    the   taught   already   that   profits   by   teaching. 

Chris.-Eve  4:7.     C.  318. 
Profitest.     all  for  thee  Who  profitest  by  all  the  present,  past. 

And  future  operation  of  thy  race.   Bean-St.  0  :  281.    C.  946. 
Programme,     a  programme  figured  here  —  Pray  God  no  after- 
practice  put  to  proof.     R.  and  B.  3  :  85.     C.  447. 
Progress,     they  set  down  all  progress  as  a  dream.    Para.  1  :  68. 

C.  28. 
progress  is  The  law  of  life,  man  is  not  Man  as  yet.     Para. 

1 :  118.     C.  47. 
Most  progress  is  most  failure.     Clean  4  :  121.     C.  360. 
progress,  man's  distinctive  mark  alone.  Not  God's,  and  not  the 

beasts'  :  God  is,  they  are,  Man  partly  is  and  wholly  hopes  to 

be.     Death  in  D.  4  :  204.     C.  391. 
Yet  progress  means  contention,  to  my  mind.     Ari.  A.  5: 102. 

C.  629. 
Progress  for  the  bold  !     You  saw  the  body,  't  is  the  soul  we 

see.     Ger.  de  L.  6  :  347.     C.  972. 
Promenading.    The  cavalcading  promenading  place  Beside  the 

gate    .    .    .    Under  the  Pinciau  gardens.     R.  and  B.  3 :  9. 

C.  418. 
Promise.     If   we  've   promised   them   aught,  let   us  keep  our 

promise  !     Pied  Piper  2  :289.     C.  271. 
But  human  promise,  oh,  how  short  of  shine  !     How  topple 

down  the  piles  of  hope  we  rear  !     R.  and  B.  3  :7.     C.  417. 


198  PROMISE  — PROUD 

Promise.     Got  promise,  missed  performauee  —  what  would  you 

have  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  40.     C.  430. 
promise  was  not  simply  made  to  break,  Mere  moonshine-struc- 
ture meant  to  fade  at  dawn.     R.  and  B.  3  :  332.     C.  545. 
Proniisiug.     the  bright  moment  of  promising  is  but  a  moment 

.  .  .  yet,  if  sincere  in  its  moment's  extravagant  goodness, 

whv,  trust  it  and  know  the  man  by  it.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  352. 

C.  295. 
Promptings.    Promptings  from  heaven  and  hell,  as  if  the  stars 

Fought  in  their  courses  for  a  fate  to  be.     R.  and  B.  3  :371. 

C.  5."j9. 
Promptitude.      promptitude,    Which    flung    him    prone    and 

fastened  him  from  hurt.     /n«  yl.  5  :288.     C.  791. 
Properest.     I  am,  if  not  of  men  the  first  and  best,  Still  — 

to   receive   enjoyment  —  properest.       Geo.   B.   D.   6  :  322. 

C.  9G3. 
Prophecy.     Your  prophecy  on  the  whole  Was  fair  enough  as 

propliesyings  go.     Para.  1 :  09.     C.  28. 
Prose-experience,  prose-experience  which  provides  the  draught 

Which    song  -  sprouts,     wanting,    wither.      Joch.    6 :  225. 

C.  924. 
Proseman.    Doffed  lyric  dress  and  trod  the  world  once  more  A 

drab-clothed  decent  proseman.     Chris.  Sm.  6  :317.    C.  961. 
Prosody,     those  who  had  the  hammering  Of  prosody  into  me 

and    svnitax,  And   did   it,  not  with  hobnails  but  tintacks ! 

Flight  2 -.300.     C.  277. 
Prosper.       Remark  Why  schemes  wherein   cold-blooded  men 

embark    Prosper,  when   vour  enthusiastic  sort  Fail.     Sor. 

1:280.     C.  109. 
Prospering.     AVe  shall  march  prospering,  —  not    through    his 

presence.     Lost  L.  2  :  3.     C.  164. 
Prosperity.     Prosperitv  rolled  river-like  and  stopped,  Making 

their  mill  go.     R.  and  B.  3  :  71.     C.  442. 
Prostration,     prostration  .  .  .  Utter  and  absolute  beyond  be- 
lief, Past  hope  of  hatred  even.     Ari.  A.  b  :  235.    C.  679. 
Protestants.     Heaven  keep  us   Protestants   from   harm  :   the 

rest  ...  no  ill  betide  !     Cardin.  6  :  401  ;  7  :31.     C.  992. 
Protestation.     Protestation  's  cheap,  —  But,  if  to  die  for  you 

did  any  good  — •     Colomhe  2  :  196.     C.  237. 
Protus.     Protus   ends  a  period   Of  empery  beginning  with   a 

god.     Protus  2  :  320.     C.  283. 
Proud.     Man  should  be  Innnble;  you  are  very  proud  :  And  God, 

dethroned,  has    doleful   plagues    for  such  !      Para.  1  :  43. 

C.  18. 
so  proud  with  brooding  o'er  The  light  of  his  interminable  line. 

A  Blot  2: 152.     C.  219. 
You  will  be  proud  of  my  world-wide  career,  And  I  content  in 

you  the  fair  and  good.     Colomhe  2  :  226.     C.  249. 


PROVERBS  — PUIUTY  199 

Proverbs,     says  Solomon,  (The  Holy  Spirit  speaking  by  his 

mouth  in  Proverbs  .  .  .  )  A',  and  B.  3  :  •j!92.     C.  530. 
Providence.     ICven  the  blind  can  see  a  providence  here.     R. 
and  B.  3  :  35.     C.  428. 
No  mere  mote's-breadth  but  teems  immense  With  witnessings 

of  providence.     Chris.-Eve  4  :  28.     C.  325. 
Providence  cares  for  every  hungry  mouth  !     Eagle  G  :  240. 
C.  930. 
Public,     that  mild  yet  potent  spell  —  Beyond  or  beat  of  drum 
or  stroke    of   sword  —  Public  opinion!     Prince  H.  4:3G6. 
C.  695. 
The  public  weal,  which  hangs  to  the  law,  which  holds  By  the 
Church,  which  happens  to  be  through  God  himself.    R.  and 

B.  3  :  148.     C.  473. 

Publish.     For  daring  —  prodigy  of  impudence  —  Publish  what, 

secret,  were  permissible.     P^o^-C  C  :266.     C.  940. 
Pulse,     last  as  first,  I  have  not  quickened  his  pulse  one  beat. 

Fixed  a  moment's  fancy.     Mary  W.  6  :  206.     C.  916. 
Punished,     punished,  though  By  a  pin-point   scratch,   means 

guilty.     R.  and  B.  3  :  185.     C.  488. 
Punishment.    God's  punishment  will  overtake  you  yet.    Druses 

2  :  124.     C.  208. 
Sin   has  surprised   us,  so  will    punishment.     A    Blot  2  :  154. 

C.  220. 

only  after  death,  begins  ...  —  immunity  Of  faultiness  from 
fault's  due  punishment !     Ari.  A.  5  :136.     C.  643. 

Puppet.  Keep  the  puppet  of  my  foes  —  Her  voice  that  lisps 
me  back  their  curse  —  her  eye  They  lend  their  leer  of  tri- 
umph to  —  her  lip  I  touch  and  taste  their  very  filth  upon  ? 
R.  and  B.  3  :  84.     C.  447. 

Puppyhood.  what  should  old  dog  do  But  eye  young  litters' 
frisky  puppyhood  ?     Inn  A.  5  :311.     C.  800. 

Purblind,  us  ignobly  common-sensed,  Purblind.  Ger.  de  L. 
6:344.     C.  971. 

Pure.     How  I  look  to  you  For  the  pure  and  true,  And   the 

beauteous  and  the  right, —     Lovers^  Q.  2  :30.     C.  173. 

In  thouglit,  word  and  deed.  How  throughout  all  thy  warfare 

thou  wast  pure,  I  find  it  easy  to  believe.     R.  and  B.  3  :  382. 

C.  564. 

the  pale  and  pure  grew  fiery-fine.     Red  Cott.  5  :  35.     C.  749. 

Purged,  my  youth's  friend  Purged  from  all  error,  gloriously 
renewed.     Struf.  1  :  191.     C.  74. 

Puritans,  rank  puritans  caught  at  prayer.  Ned  B.  6  :  144. 
C.  888. 

Purity.     Thy  purity  of  heart  I  loved  aloud.  Thy  man's-truth  I 
was  bold  to  bid  God  see  !     Any  Wife  2  :69.     C.  188. 
through  the  crystal  shrine.  Purity  in  quintessence,  one  dew- 
drop,  You  all  descry  a  spider.     R.  and  B.  3  :  257.     C.  517. 


200  PUKITY  —  QUIETUDE 

Purity.     God's  gift  of  a  purity  of  soul  That  will  not  take  pollu- 
tion, eruiine-like.     R.  and  B.  3  :  371.     C.  559. 
Yet  if  in  purity  and  patience,  if  In  faith  held  fast  despite  the 
plucking  fiend.     R.  and  B.  3  :  379.     C.  5G2. 

Purpose.  I  search  but  cannot  see  What  purpose  serves  the 
soul  that  strives,  or  world  it  tries  Conclusions  with.  Fijine 
4:405.  C.  714. 
still,  some  few  Have  grace  to  see  Thy  purpose,  strength  to 
mar  Thy  work  by  no  admixture  of  their  own.  Fr.  Fu. 
6  :333.     C.  9G7. 

Purse,  a  purse  added  to  a  purse  makes  the  holder  twice  as 
rich.     SouVs  Tr.  2  :  357.     C.  298. 

Purulence.  what  a  bag  of  veuomed  purulence  Was  split  and 
noisome.     R.  and  B.  3  :  222.     C.  503. 

Puzzled.     In   truth  you  look  as  puzzled  as  ere  I  preached  ! 
R.  and  B.  3  :  141.     C.  470. 
Looked  puzzled  on,  or  pityingly  off,  But  never  dreamed  of  pay- 
ing gibe  by  jeer.     Ari.  A.  5  :  122.     C.  637. 

Pym.  "  Pym,  the  man  of  men  !  "  Up,  heads,  your  proudest 
—  out,  throats,  your  loudest  "  Somerset's  Pym  !  "  Chas.  A. 
6  :  364.     C.  978. 

Q 

Quarrel.     And  bear  confidingly  each  quarrel  straight,  O  Law, 

to  thy  recipient  mother-knees  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  345.     C.  550. 

But  do  not  let  us  quarrel  any  more.     Andrea  4  :  83.     C.  346. 

Quatrain's,  the  quatrain's  inch  Of  homage,  or  at  most  the 
sonnet's  ell  Of  admiration.      Tu^o  Poets  6  :  93.     C.  865. 

Quality.  Quality  took  the  decent  part,  of  course  ;  Held  by 
the  husband,  who  was  noble  too.     R.  and  B.3:7.     C.  417. 

Question,  on  either  side  Of  any  question,  something  is  to  say. 
^n.  ^.5:146.     C.  647. 

Quickened,  motions  of  mine  That  quickened,  made  the  in- 
ertness malleolable  O'  the  gold  was  not  mine.  R.  and  B. 
3:16.     C.  421. 

Quiescence.  Quiescence  which  attacks,  rebellion  which  en- 
dears.    Fijine  4  :  396.     C.  709. 

Quiet.     Well,    't  is  not  sure  the   quiet  lasts  forever  !      Luria 
2:369.     C.  302. 
the  house,   late   distracted  by  their  peals,   Quiet  as  Carmel 

where  the  lilies  live.     R.  and  B.  3  :  48.     C.  433. 
Quiet  as  ever  :  but  a  quietude  Bent  on  pursuing  its  descent  to 
truth.     Balau.  4  :  295.     C.  615. 

Quietude,     where  there  is  no  quietude,  .  .  .  the  mind  is  often 
cast  Down  from  the  heights.     R.  and  B.  3  :  29li.     C.  530. 
touch  what  you  term  Quietude  —  that 's  an  miiverse  in  germ. 
Inap.  6  :  400  ;  7  :  27.     C.  991. 


RACE  — RASH  201 


R 

Race,     each  of  the  Many  helps  to  recruit  The  life  of  the  race 
by  a  general  plan.     By  Fire.  2  :  6G.     C.  187. 
I  ran  life's  race,  With  the  whole  world  to  see,  as  only  strains 
His  strength  some  athlete.     Forgiv.  5  :  358.     C.  817. 
Rack.     Each  noble  had  his  rack  for  private  use,  And  would, 
for  the  diversion  of  a  guest  —     R.  and  B.  3  :  288.     C.  529. 
Rage.     Ha,  how  is  this  ?     What  moonstruck  rage  is  here  ?     R. 

and  B.  3  :  339.     C.  547. 
Rain.     The  rain  set  early  in  to-night.     Porph.  2  :  329.     C.  286. 
chill  persistent  rain  has  purged  our  streets  Of  gossipry.     R. 

and  B.  3 -.302.     C.  556. 
No  :  rain  and  wind  must  rub  the  rags  away  And  let  the  lazy 

land  untroubled  snore.     Red  Cott.  5:4.     C.  738. 
sorrowful  Sulked  field  and  pasture  with  persistent  rain.     Red 

Cott.  5  :  53.     C.  756. 
Inside  town,  dogs  went   mad,  and   folk  ke2)t   bibbing  beer. 
While    the    parsons    prayed   for    rain.      Ned  B.    6 :  143. 
C.  887. 
Ran.     You  blame  me  that  I  ran  away  ?     Why,  Sir,  the  enemy 

advanced.     Arcades  6  :405  ;  7  :  43.     C.  99*3. 
Rank.     But   all   the    world   calls   rank   divides   us.      Colombe 
2  :  218.     C.  246. 
their  wick  swims  in  the  safe  broad  bowl  O'  the  middle  rank. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  108.     C.  457. 
Rank,  privilege,  indulgence,  grown  beyond  Earth's  bearing, 

even,  ask  Jansenius  else  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  443.     C.  588. 
afraid  His  fellow-men  should  give  him  rank  By  mere  tenta- 
tives.     Eas.-Day  4  :  50.     C.  333. 
Ransacked.      ransacked  .  .  .  Those    old   odd   corners   of   an 
empty  heart  For  remnants  of  dim  love.     R.  and  B.  3  :  158. 
C.  477. 
Rapacity,     an  easy  mark  For  hypocritical  rapacity.     Red  Cott. 

5  :  88.     C.  770. 
Rapture.     A  rapture  to  fall  where  your  foot  might  be.     J.  Lee 
4  :  164.     C.  376. 
Then  from  Olumpos  to  Erebos,  then  from  the  rapture  to  tor- 
ment.    IxionQ  :21Q.     C.  917. 
Rarities,     chamber  —  With  all  its  rarities  that  ache  In  silence 

while  day  lasts.     Gondola  2  :  267.      C.  263. 
Rascal.     How  he  draws  up,  ducks  under,  twists  aside  !     He  's 
a  lean-gutted  hectic  rascal.     R.  and  B.  3  :  284.     C.  527. 
never  was  such  an  extortionate  Rascal  —  the  word  has  escaped 
my  teeth  !     Ponte  ^.  6  :  407  ;  7  :  47.     C.  994. 
Rash.      True,   for  once   rash   counsel 's  best.     Luria   2  :  362. 
C.  299. 


202  RASHNESS  — RECONCILING 

Rashness.    Rashness  helps  caxitiou  with  him.    R.  and  B.  3  :27. 

C.  425. 
Rat.     rat  who  belled  The  eat  once,  and  would  never  deign  en- 
gage In  after-combat  with  mere  mice.     Two  Poets  6  :  110. 

C.  872. 
Rave,     did  not  rave  —  A  maniac,  did  not  find  his  reason  melt 

—  An  idiot.      Two  Poets  6  :  90.     C.  864. 
Rave,  rate,  and  reason  —  spend  your  breath  in  vain!     Dan. 

Bar.  6  :  304.     C.  955. 
Re-issue.     Re-issue  looks  and  words  from  the  old  mint,  Pass 

tJiem  afresh,  no  matter  whose  the  print.     Any  Wife  2  :  70. 

C.  188. 
Re-tell,     bidden  re-tell  his  tale,  Since  the  first  telling  somehow 

missed  effect.     R.  and  B.  3  :  24.     C.  424. 
Read.      Perchance  more  careful   whoso  runs  may  read  Than 

erst  when  all,  it  seemed,  could  read  who  ran.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  31.     C.  427. 
Could  vou  fail  read  this  cartulary  aright.     R.  and  B.  3  :  229. 

C.  505. 
Ready.      Just  this  one  rough  and  ready  man  leapt  forth  !  — 

Was   found,    sole    anti-Fabius    (dare    I   say).     R.  and   B. 

3  :  342.     C.  549. 
And  stand  all  ready  for  morn's  joy  a-blush  ?    Red  Cotl.  5  :97. 

C.  773. 
Real,     so,  through  sham  And  outside,  I  arrive  at  inmost  real. 

Fifine  4 :  429.     C.  728. 
Bring  the  real  times  back,  confessed  Still  better  than  our 

very  best  !      Warmg  2  :  274.     C.  266. 
Reason.     Reason  aims  to  raise  Some  makeshift  scaffold-vantage 

midway.      Camel-D.  0  :  2.58.      C.  937. 
'Tis  Man's  to  explore  Up  and   down,  inch  by  inch,  with  the 

taper  his  reason.     Apol.  and  F.  6  ::i91.     C.  951. 
Reasons.     So  multiplied  were  reasons  pro  and  con,  Delicate, 

intertwisted  and  obscure.     R.  and  B.  3  :  296.     C.  532. 
Reasoning,     reasoning   which,    to   reach,   burnt  out  a   brain. 

Luria  2  :  383.     C.  307. 
Rebounds.     The  injurious  idle  stone  Rebounds  and  hits  the 

head  of  him  who  flung.     R.  and  B.  3  :  329.     C  544. 
Receptacle,     that  receptacle  So  bleak  without,  so  warm  and 

white  within  ?     Red  Cott.  5:6.     C.  738. 
Reclaimed.     Is  't  by  the  rough  way  she  shall  be  reclaimed  ? 

R.  and  B.  3 -.339.     C.  547. 
Reconcilement.       Life     there,     outlying  !      Roughness    and 

smoothness.  Shine  and  defilement,  Grace  and  uncouthness  : 

One  reconcilement.     Plsgah  S.  I.  o:  341.     C.  810. 
Reconciling,     there  is  no  reconciling  wisdom  with  a  world  dis- 
traught,  Goodness    with   triumphant   evil.      La   S.    6  :  63. 

C.  853. 


RECORD  —  RELFE  203 

Record.  As  the  record  from  youth  to  age  Of  my  ovrn,  the 
single  soul  —  So  the  world's  wide  book.  Rev.  6  :  435  ; 
7  :  103.     C.  1005. 

Record's,  time  is  now  To  turn  the  record's  last  and  bloody 
leaf  .  .  .  chronicling  a  nation's  great  despair.  Straf.  1  :  133. 
C.  51. 

Records.  Your  law-courts  stand,  your  records  frown  a-row  : 
What  if  I  rove  and  rummage  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  10.     C.  418. 

Recreant.     Must  one  more  recreant  to  his  race  Die  with  unex- 
erted  powers.     Para.  1 :  53.     C.  22. 
No  recreant  yet !     The  great  word  went  from  England  to  ray 
soul,  And  I  arose.     Straf.  1: 182.     C.  70. 

Rectitude.  —  some  fondness  of  conceit  That  rectitude,  saga- 
city sufficed  The  investigator.     R.  and  B.  3  :  181.     C.  487. 

Red.  that  tragical  red  eve,  .  .  .  the  other  red  of  morning, 
two  red  plates  That  crushed  together.  R.  and  B.  3  :  272. 
C.  523. 

Redress,  demands  redress  As  if  he  were  the  pattern  of  de- 
sert.    R.  and  B.  3  :  99.     C.  453. 

Reduced.  Here,  by  the  little  mind  of  man,  reduced  To  little- 
ness that  suits  his  faculty.     R.  and  B.  3  :  385.     C.  5G5. 

Reeds.  Behold,  my  spirit  bleeds.  Catches  no  more  at  broken 
reeds.     Eas.-Day  4  :  53.     C.  334. 

Refinement,  refinement  every  incli  From  brow  to  boot-end. 
/nn  .4.  5:246.     C.  775. 

Refused,  with  a  gesture  kind  but  conclusive.  And  a  little 
shake  of  the  head,  refused.     Flight  2  :  306.     C.  277. 

Regret.     So,  now  my  work  Begins  —  to  save  him  from  regret. 
King  V.  1:386.     C.  152. 
man's  regret  for  greatness  gone,  ungraced  Perchance  by  even 
that  poor  meed,  man's  praise.     Ari.  A.  5  :131.     C.  641. 

Rehearsal.  Things  rarely  go  smooth  at  Rehearsal.  Pacch. 
5  :  328.     C.  806. 

Rejoice.     I  shall  rejoice  Wlien  my  part  in  the  farce  is  shuffled 
through,  And  the  curtain  falls.     Para.  1:74.     C.  30. 
Rejoice  we  are  allied  To  That  which  doth  provide  And  not  ]>ar- 
take,  effect  and  not  receive  !     Ben  Ezra  4  :  186.     C.  384. 

Relapsed,  relapsed,  and  back  again  Brought  the  late-ejected 
devil  with  a  score  more  in  his  train.     Clive  6  :  161.     C.  896. 

Relative,  you  know  the  relative  worth  of  things,  "What  is  per- 
missible or  inopportune.     R.  and  B.  3  :  419.     C.  578. 

Release.     Then  told  how  fierce  temptation  of  release  By  self- 
dealt   death   was   busy  with    her   soul.     R.  and  B.  3  :  90. 
C.  450. 
Why,  a  rapture   of  release   From   toil,  —  that 's  sleep's  ap- 
proach.    Bean-St.  6:213.     C.  943. 

Relfe.  Great  John  Relfe,  Master  of  mine,  learned,  redoubtable. 
Chas.A.6:3o6.     C.  975. 


204 


RELICS  — RENEW 


Relics,     by  the  dreary  relics  of  the  west  "Wan   through  the 

half-moon  window,  all  his  light.     R.  and  B.  3  :29.     C.  425. 
Relict,     she,  sad  relict,  must  drag  residue  Of  days  encumbered 

by  this  load  of  wealth.     Red  Colt.  5  :  19.     C.  743. 
Relieve.     One  touch,  one  lancet-puncture  would  relieve.     R. 

and  B.  3  :2G2.     C.  519. 
Religion.     Religion  used  to  tell  Humanity  She  gave  him  war- 
rant or  denied  him  course.     R.  and  B.  3  :23.     C.  423. 
Religion,  did  we  wait  for  thee  To  ope  the  book,  that  serves  to  * 

sit  upon,  ...  we  should  wait  indeed  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  23. 

C.  423. 
Religion  's  all  or  nothing  ;  it's  no  mere  smile  O'  contentment, 

sigh  of  aspiration,  sir.     Sludge  4 :  245.     C.  407. 
Despite  the  chop  and  change,  .  .  .  Patched-up  and  plastered- 

o'er.  Religion  stands  at  least  I'  the  temple-type.      Fifine 

4  :  432.     C.  729. 
Religion  perks  up  through  impiety.     Ari.  yl.  5  :  162.     C.  653. 
Relishes.     She  relishes  that  homely  phrase  of  life,  That  com- 
mon town-talk,  more  than  trumpet-blasts.     Ari.  A.  5  :  149. 

C.  648, 
Reluctant.     Lugged  from  reluctant  pouch.     Red  Cott.  5 :  12. 

C.  740. 
Remain.     Yet  I  myself  remain  ;  I  feel  myself  :  And  there  is 

nothing  lost.     Death  in  D.  4  :  193.     C.  386. 
Remake.     My  business  is  not  to  remake   myself.  But  make 

the  absolute  best  of  what  God  made.      Bishop  B.  4  :  100. 

C.  352. 
Remedy.     No   remedy   at   all !     It   makes  the  remedy  itself 

—  time  makes  it.     King  V.  1  :  392.     C.  154. 
Remedies,     remedies  In  silence  what  the  foolish  rail  against. 

SouVs  Tr.  2  :  339.     C.  290. 
Remember,     if  you  would   remember   me  aright,   As   I  was 

born  to  be,  you  must  forget  All  fitful,  strange  and  moody 

waywardness.     Para.  1  :  27.     C.  12. 
I  will  remember  once  more  for  his  sake  The  sorrow :  for  he 

lives  and  is  belied.     R.  and  B.  3  :  258.     C.  517. 
There  is  nothing  to  remember  in  me.     /.  Lee  4  :  163.     C.  376. 
Reminder,     one  reminder  of  this  gnawing  want,  One  special 

prick  o'  the  maggot  at  the  core.     R.  and  B.  3  :  71.     C.  442. 
Remorse,     deeds  for  which  remorse  were  vain  as  for  The  wan- 
derings of  delirious  dream.     Pan.  1:9.     C.  5. 
with  such  remorse  As  folly  feels,  since  pain  can  make  it  wise. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  80.     C.  445. 
Render.     Bid  my  heart  — their  shrine  —  Render  back  its  store 

of  gifts,  old  looks  and  words  of  thine.     Epil.  Melon.  6  :  242. 

C.  930. 
Renew.     God,  that  created  all  things,  can  renew  !    Para.  1:52. 

C.  22. 


RENOUNCE  —  RESIST  205 

Renounce.     Renounce  the  past,  Forswear  the  future  ;  look  for 

joy  no  more.     Para.  1:1)7.     C.  39. 
Renounced.     Having,  as  one  who  puts  his  hand  to  the  plough, 

Renounced  the  over-vivid   family -fuel,      R.  and   B.  3  :  74:. 

C.  443. 
wiped  away  the  transient  tear.  Renounced  the  playing  Danae 

to  gold  dreams.     R.  and  B.  3  :  77.     C.  444. 
Renovation.     Repair  wreck,  stanchion  wall  to  heart's  content, 

But  never  think  of  renovation.     Red  Colt.  5  :  2G.     C.  746. 
Repeat.     In  lecturing  it  was  his  constant  rule.  Whatever  he 

expounded,  to  repeat.     Joch.  6  :217.     C.  920. 
Repent.     You  '11  not  repent  confiding  in  me,  love  ?     Kinj    V. 

1  :  377.     C.  148. 
You  urge  him  all  the  brisklier  to  repent  Of  most  and  least  and 

aught  and  ever^'thing  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  353.     C.  553. 
What  else  am  I  to  cry  out  in  my  rage.  Unable  to  repent  one 

particle  O'  the  past  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :424.     C.  581. 
Repentance.     Could  I  have  probed   through  the  face  to  the 

heart,  read  plain  a  rej^entance.     Ixion  6  :  209.     C.  917. 
Rephan.     Thou  art  past   Rephan,  thy  place  be  Earth  !      Reph. 

G : 434  ;  7 : 101.     C. 1005. 
Repine.     Why  repine  ?     Tliere  's  ever  some  one  lives  although 

ourselves  be  dead  !     La  S.  6  :  61.     C.  852. 
Repose,      repose  though  death's  self  pour   The  plenitude    of 

quiet.     R.  and  B.  3  :  220.     C.  502. 
Reprisal.     And  nickname  mere  reprisal,  envy  makes.  Punish- 
ment.    R.  and  B.  3  :  415.     C.  577.     ' 
Reputation.      If  so  my  worldly  reputation  burst.   Being  the 

bubble  it  is,  why,  burst  it  may.     R.  and  B.  3  :  98.     C.  453. 
Rescue,     since  her  callow  soul,  a-shiver  late.  Craved   simply 

warmth  and  called  mere  passers-by  To  the  rescue.     R.  and 

£.3:59.     C.  437. 
Resent.     I,  for  mankind,  resent  each  shrug  and  smirk,  Each 

beck  and   bend,    each  .  .  .  all   you  do    and    are.  I   hate  ! 

SouVs  Tr.  2  :  340.     C.  290. 
I  resent  my  wrong.  Being  a  man  :    I  only  show  man's  soul 

Through  man's  ilesh.     R.  and  B.  3  :425.     C.  581. 
Resentment,     one   may  feel  resentment  like  a  flame  Within. 

Para.  1  :  89.     C.  36. 
Was  wrinkled  over  with  resentment  yet,  Nor  calm  at  all,  as 

murdered  faces  use.     R.  and  B.  3  :  34.     C.  427. 
Pent-up    resentment    used    its    privilege.      Ari.   A.    5:236. 

C.  679. 
Reserve.       Down-treading  reserve,   away   Thrusting   respect. 

Bad  D.  II.  6  :  396  ;  7  :  19.     C.  989. 
Resignedly.     Not  one  of  man's  acquists  Ought  he  resignedly 

to  lose,  methinks.     Ger.  de  L.  6  :346.     C.  971. 
Resist.    I  did  resist ;  would  I  had  overcome  !    R.  and  B.  3  :254. 

C.  515. 


20G  RESOLUTE  — REVEALED 

Resolute.      TThat  else  notewortlu'  and    comniendable   I'   the 

man's  career?  —  that  he  was  resolute.     Prince  H.  4:373. 

C.  698. 
Resolve.     Just  so  !    So  we  resolve  on  a  thing  and  sleep.    Stat. 

and  B.  2  :  324.     C.  284. 
Resources.    'Twere  little  praise  Did  full  resources  wait  on  our 

goodwill  At  every  turn.     Para.  1  :  57.     C.  24. 
Respectability.     Vulgar  flat  smooth  respectability.     Inn  A. 

o  :  244.     C.  774. 
Respites,     respites  blessedly  each  fretted  nerve  O'  the  much- 
enduring  man.     R.  and  B.  3  :  334.     C.  545. 
Rest.     An  end,  a  rest !  strange  how  the  notion,  once  Encount- 
ered, gathers  strength  by  moments  !     Rest  !     Para.  1 :  47. 

C.  20. 
A  spotless  child  sleeps  on  the  flowering  moss  —  'T  is  well  for 

him  :  bnt  when  a  sinful  man.  Envying  such  slumber,  may 

desire  to  put  His  guilt  away,  shall  he  return  at  once  To  rest 

by  lying  there  ?     Pora.  1  :98.     C.  39. 
There  remaiueth  a  rest  for  the  people  of  God.    Old  Pict.  2  :  41. 

C.  177. 
Thou  with  the  soul  that  never  can  take  rest.     Luria  2  :  392. 

C.  311. 
Resting-place.     Which,  hark,  I  have  dared  and  done,  for  ray 

resting-place  is  found.     Abt  V.  4  :  185.     C.  383. 
Restless,     years   make  men   restless  —  they  needs  must   spy 

Some  certainty,  some  sort  of  end  assured.    R.  and  B.  3  :  74. 

C.  443. 
Restlessness.   I  say  this  from  no  prurient  restlessness.  No  self- 
complacency.     Para.  1  :  64.     C.  26. 
Restorative.     The  thing  's  restorative  I'  the  touch  and  sight. 

R.  and  B.  3:3.     C.  415. 
Restraint,     and  long  restraint  chained  down  My  soul  till  it 

was  changed.     Pau.  1:9.     C.  5. 
Results.      Results  .  .  .  derived  alone  from  seasons  dark  As 

the  thoughts  they  bred  ?     Para.  1  :  91.     C.  37. 
results   alone.   Not  processes  which  nourish  such  results.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  322.     C.  541. 
Retain.     Could    I  retain  one  strain   of   all  the  psalm  Of  the 

angels,  one  word  of  the  fiat  of  God.     Para.  1  :  58.     C.  24. 
Retellings.     Retellings  to   satiety,  which  strike  Muffled  upon 

tlie  ear's  drum.     Chris.  Sm.  6  :  316.     C.  960. 
Retire.     Retire  with  neither  cross  nor  pile  from  play  ?  —  So 

incurious,  so  short-casting  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  151.     C.  474. 
Retribution,     the  clutch  Of  guiding  retribution  has  in  charge 

The  author  of  the  outrage  !     Ari.  A.o:  238.     C.  680. 
Return.     Husband,  return  then,  I  re-counsel  thee  !     R.  and  B. 

3:349.     C.  551. 
Revealed.      Your   best   self   revealed  at  uttermost,  —  That 's 

the  wise  way  o'  the  strong  !     Fijine  4  :  415.     C.  720. 


REVENGE  — REWARD  207 

Revenge.    Take  revenn^e  !  Wide,  deep  —  to  live  upon,  in  feeling 

now,  —  And,  after  live,  in  memory.     Ltiria  2  :3'J2.     C.  311. 
Without  revenge   to  humanize   the  deed.     R.  and  B.  3  :  83. 

C.  446. 
excogitate  How  he   might  keep  the  good  and  leave  the  bad 

Twined   in   revenge,   yet   extricable.      R.   and    B.    3 :  84. 

C.  447. 
(Oh  mouse-birth  of  that  mountain-like  revenge  !)     R.  and  B. 

3  :  97.     C.  452. 
Then  did  the  winch  o'  the  winepress  of  all  hate.  Vanity,  disap- 
pointment, grudge  and  greed.  Take  the  last  turn  that  screws 

out  pure  revenge.     K.  and  B.  3  :  102.     C.  454. 
'T  is  the  town-talk  ;  so  my  revenge  shall  be.   R.  and  B.  3  :  260. 

C.  518. 
Nor  can  revenge  of  injury  done  here  To  the  honor  ...  Be 

too  excessive.     R.  and  B.  3  :  289.     C.  529. 
Absolve  the  husband,  outi-aged,   wliose  revenge    Anticipated 

law,  plied  sword  liimself .     R.  and  B.  3  :  291.     C.  530. 
primitive  revenge,  Which,  like  tire  damped  and  dammed  up, 

burns  more  fierce.     R.  and  B.  3  :  295.     C.  531. 
Craft,  greed  and  violence  complot  revenge.    R.  and  B.  3  :372. 

C.  560. 
None  of  your  abnegation  of  revenge  !     Fly  at  me  frank,  tug 

while  I  tear  again  !     R.  and  B.  3  :449.     'C.  591. 
Here   the   revenge  of   a  God,  there  the   amends  of   a  Man. 

Ixion  6  :  207.     C.  916. 
Reverence.     Were  all  the  precepts  of  the  wise  a  waste  —  Bred 

in  thee   not  one  touch  of  reverence  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  339. 

C.  548. 
Despise  the  world  and  reverence  yourself.     Ari.  A.  5: 120. 

C.  636. 
Revolt.     There  had  been  compensation  in  revolt  —  Revolt 's  to 

quell.     R.  and  B.  3  :  427.     C.  582. 
Reward,     what  hinders  Reward  from  springing  out  of  toil,  as 

changed   As   bursts   the   flower   from   earth  and  root  and 

stalk  ?     Para.  1  :  52.     C.  22. 
Your  reward,  or  soon  or  late,  W\\\  come  from  \A\\\  whom  no 

man  serves  in  vain.     Para.  1  :  74.     C.  30. 
Reward  him  or  I  waive  Reward  !     Para.  1  :  111.     C.  44. 
The  knowledge   that  you   are   a  bard  Must  constitute  your 

prime,  nay  sole,  reward  !     Sor.  1  :  234.     C.  91. 
By  the  pain-throb,  triumphantly  winning  intensified  bliss.  And 

the  next  world's  reward  and  repose,  by  the  struggles  in 

this.     Saul  2:57.     C.  184. 
Choose  your  own  reward  !     The  peril  over,  its  reward  begins  ! 

SouVs  Tr.  2: 3i7.     C.  293. 
Exorbitant  belief  in  worth's  reward.     Luria  2  :  366.     C.  301. 
The  overtaking  night  brings  such   reward!      Luria  2:372. 

C.  303. 


208  REWARD  —  RIGHT 

Reward.     Who  won  the  race  kneels,  craves  reward  at  your 

liand.     Rosny  6  :  391  ;  7  : 4.     C.  987. 
ReAvards.     No  petty  post  rewards  a  nobleman  For  spending 
youth  in  s^jlendid  lackey- work.     R.  and  B.  3  :40.     C.  430. 
Revrarded.     rewarded  Amply  by  one  stranger's  rapture,  Com- 
mon praise  discarded.     Flute-M.  6  :  422  ;  7:  77.     C.  1000. 
Revsrarding.     Rewarding  none  while  compensating  each,  Hurt- 
ing all  round  though  harming  nobody.     li.  and  B.  3  :  99. 
C.  453. 
Rhyme,     the  vein   Poetic  vielded  rhyme  by  drops  and  spirts. 
Two  Poets  & -.02.     C.  805. 
Have   people  time  And   patience   nowadays   for   thought  in 
rhyme  ?     Two  Poets  6  :  93.     C.  865. 
Riband.     Just  for  a  riband  to  stick  in  his  coat.     Lost  i.  2  :3. 

C.  164. 
Riches.     Not   over-rich,  .  .  ,  But  such  a  man  as  riches  rub 

against,  Readily  stick  to.     R.  and  B.  3  :  39.     C.  429. 
Ride.     As  I  ride,  as  I  ride.  With  a  full  heart  for  my  guide.  So 
its  tide  rocks  my  side.      Thro'  Met.  2:6.     C.  165. 
Sing,   riding  's   a  joy  !     For  me,  I  ride.     Last  Ride  2  :  280. 

C.  268. 
Ride,  ride  together,  forever  ride  ?    Last  Ride  2  :  281.    C.  268. 
Riddle.    All 's  a  clear  rede  and  no  more  riddle  now.   R.  and  B. 

3:261.     C.  555. 
Right.     Hold  bv  the  right,  you  double  your  might.     Marching 
2:2.     C.  1G3. 
What  right  was  yours  to  set  The  thoughtless  foot  upon  her 

life  and  mine.     A  Blot  2  :  173.     C.  228. 
Felt  time's  old   barrier-growth  of   right   and  fit   Give  way 
through  all  its   t%vines,  and  let  me  go.     R.  and  B.  3  :  2l4. 
C.  499. 
Right,  promptly   done,  is  twice  right  :  right  delayed  Turns 

wrong.     R.  and  B.  3  :  301.     C.  533. 
Right  predominates  in  life  ?     Then  why  two  lives  and  double 

boon  ?     La  S.  6  :  62.     C.  853. 
For  truth  and  right,  and  only  right  And  truth,  —  right,  truth, 
on  the  absolute  scale  of  God,  .  .  .  Fight  your  hearts  out, 
whatever  fate  betide.     Prince  H.  'k:Z12.     C.  698. 
Never  dreamed,  thougb  right  were  worsted,  wrong  would  tri- 
umph, Held  we  fall  to  rise.   ^7J«7.  ^.6:440  ;7: 113.  C.  1007. 
ever  with  the  softening,  sure  belief,  That  all  would  end  some 

strange  way  right  at  last.     Straf.  1:  178.     C.  68. 
All  has  gone  wrong  ;  But  I  meant  right,  God  knows,  and  you, 

I  trust  :     Coiomhe  2  :  197.     C.  237. 
I  will  do  right  Whatever  be    the   issue.       Colomhe   2  :  210. 

C.  242. 
Here 's  a   friend  shall   set  you   right.  Let  him  but  have  the 
handsel  of  your  ear.     R.  and  B.  3  :  37.     C.  429. 


RIGHT  — RIVER  209 

Right.     But  movement  on  her  mouth   for  make-believe  Mat- 
ters were  somehow  getting  right  again.     R.  and  B.  3  :  249. 
C.  513. 
All  has  been  right  ;  I  have  gained  my  gain,  enjoyed  As  well 

as  suffered.     K.  and  B.  3 -.274:.     C.  523. 
Oh   how  right  that  is,  how  like  Jesus  Christ   To  say  that  ! 
Marriage-making  for  the  earth.    R.  and  B.  3  :  278.    C.  525. 
Still,  the  right  grain  is  proper  to  right  race.     Ari.  A.  o  :  155. 

C.  650. 
He   knew   the   right   thing,  did  it,  and   thanked  God  when 
't  was  done.     Bean-F.  6  :  403  ;  7  :  35.     C.  992. 
Right-hand,     the  strong  right-hand  clenched   stronger.  As  it 

would  pluck  a  lion  by  the  jaw.     Para.  1  :  119.     C.  47. 
Rights,     here  I   keep,  nor  shall  concede  The  meanest  of  my 
rights.     King  V.  1  :  389.     C.  153. 
One  taste  of  the  old  time  sets  all  to  rights.     Childe  R.  2  :  333. 
C.  287. 
Righteous.     Prompt  are  the  righteous  ever  with  their  rede  To 

us  the  wrongful.     King  C.  1  :  403.     C.  159. 
Righteousness.      Where   began    Righteousness,    moral   sense 
except  in  Man  ?     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  335.     C.  967. 
Man,  whom  alone  a  righteousness  endows  Would    cure  the 
wide  world's  ailing.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  335.     C.  967. 
Ring,     the  iron  ring  Festering  about  a  slave's  neck  grows  at 
length  Into  the  flesh  it  eats.     Para.  1 :  73.     C.  30. 
A  ring  without  a  posy,  aud  that  ring  mine  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  32. 

C.  427. 
A   simple   ring   with   a   single  stone.     Pearl   6  :  393  ;    7  :  12. 
C.  988. 
Ripe,     all  was  not  ripe,  you  find,  And,  as  you  hope,  may  keep 

from  ripening  yet.     King  C.  1:407.     C.  160. 
Rise.     Through  such  souls  alone  God  stooping  shows  sufficient 
of  His  light  For  us  i'  the  dark  to  rise  by.    R.  and  B.  3  :  278. 
C.  525. 
"  Into  the  truth  of  things  —  Out  of  their  falseness  rise,  and 

reach  thou,  and  remain  !"     Fifine  4  :409.     C.  710. 
Out  of  the  wreck  I  rise  —  past  Zeus  to  the  Potency  o'er  him  ! 

Ixion  6  :  211.     C.  918. 
where  light  is,  aspiring  Thither  I  rise,  whilst  thou  —  Zeus, 
keep  the  godship  and  sink  !     Ixion  6  :211.     C.  918. 
Risk,     the  risk  's  too  rash  :  Double  or  quits,  I  play,  but,  all  or 
naught.  Exceeds  my  courage.     R.  and  B.  3  :420.     C.  579. 
Bvstanders  reason,  think  of  wives  And  children  ere  they  risk 
"their  lives.     Tray  6  :  142.     C.  887. 
Ritualists.     He  's  Evangelical  ?      Your   Ritualists  prefer  the 

Church  for  spouse  !     Inn  A.o:  281.     C.  788. 
River,     far  off  the  river  Sweeps  like  a  sea,  barred  out  from 
land.     Pau.  1  :  19.     C.  9. 


210  RIVER  — ROSE 

River,     the  very  river  put  Its  arm  about  me  and  oor.dueted  me. 
A  Blot  2  :  169.     C.  226. 
A   sudden   little    river  crossed  my  path.     Ciuhle  R.  2 :  333. 
C.  288. 
Road,     men's  road  Is  one,  men's  times  of  travel  many.     Sor. 

1  :  314.     C.  122. 
Rock.     Iloek  's  the   sons^-soil   rather,   surface   hard   and    bare. 

Touch  6  :  191.     C.  910. 
Rock3.     The  rocks,  thoiif^h  unseen.  That  ruffh'  the  gray  glassy 

water  To  glorious  green  ?     Englkhni.  2  :  261.     C.  261. 
Rod.      I'he  rod  hangs  on  its  nail  behind  the  door,  Fresh  from 
tlie  brine.     R.  and  B.  3  :  67.     C.  441. 
"  Would  a  man  'scape  the  rod  ?"..."  See  that  he  turn  to 
God  The  day  before  his  death."     Ben  K.  6  :  385.     C.  372. 
Rome.     And  Rome  make  amends  for  Calvary  !    Holy-C.2  :Z19. 
C.  282. 
Far  from  beginning  with  you  London  folk,  I  took  my  book  to 
Rome  first,  tried  truth's  power  On  likely  people.     R.  and  B. 
3:10.     C.  418. 
to  the  very  tiles  of  each  red  roof  A-smoke  i'  the  sunshine, 

Rome  lies  gold  and  glad.     R.  and  B.  3  :  21.     C.  423. 
the  world  Whereof  Rome  boasts  herself  the  central  source. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  66.     C.  440. 
Rome  the  Holy,  reaches  her  At  very  holiest,  for  't  is  Christmas 

Eve.     R.  and  B.  3  :  136.     C.  468. 
Every  one  soon  or  late  comes  round  by  Rome.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  149.     C.  473. 
A  priest,  I  rather  choose  the  Church,  —  bid  Rome  Cover  the 
wronged   with   her   inviolate   shield.      R.   and   B.  3 :  224. 
C.  503. 
Rome  Out  in  the  champaign.     Red  Cott.  5:1.     C.  736. 
I  '11  to  Rome,  before  Rome's  feet  the  temporal-supreme  lay 

prostrate  !     Pietro  6  :  178.     C.  904. 
a   tumble-down   once   house   Now    hovel,  vilest  structure  in 

Ri,ine  the  ruinous.     Bean-F.  6  :  403  ;  7  :  35.     C.  992. 
Roine   itself  All  new-built,   "marble  now,  brick  once,"    he 
bon.'.ts.     Imp.  Aug.  6  :  426  ;  7  :  84.     C.  1001. 
Rome's.     All   parties   may  retire,  content,  we    hope.     That's 
R(.me's  way,  the  traditional  road  of  law.     R.  and  B.  3  :  99. 
C.  453. 
Rooms,     rooms  .  .  .  which  call  On  masters  to  be  mindful  that, 
before  ^len,  they  must  look  like  men  and  something  more. 
Forgiv.  5  :  363.     C.  818. 
Roost.     His  fluttered  faculties  came  back  to  roost  One  after 

one,  as  fowls  do.     Two  Poets  6  :84.     C.  862. 
Rose.     Some  insane  rose  that  burnt  heart  out  in  sweets.     Sor. 
1:311.     C.  121. 
arose  .  .   .  Must  you  gather  ?     Smell,  kiss,  wear  it  —  at  last, 
throw  away  !     Pretty  W.  2  :  79.     C.  191. 


ROSE  — SACRED  211 

Rose.     This  bloom  whose  best  grace  was  the  shig  outside  And 

the  wasp  inside  its  bosom,  —  call  you  "  rose  "  ?     R.  and  B. 

3:428.     C.  582. 
Earth's  rose  is  a  bud  that 's  checked  or  grows  As  beams  may 

encourage  or  blasts  oppose.    Reph.  6  :  432  ;  7  :  97.     C.  1004. 
Then  I  rose  up  like  fire,  and  fire-like  roared.    R.  and  B.  3  :  175. 

C.  484. 
Roses.     Roses,  vou  are   not  so  fair  after  all  !     Flower^s  2  : 9. 

C.  166. 
Rousseau's.     Like  a  fiery  flying  serpent  from  its  egg,  a  soul  — 

Rousseau's.     La  S.6:  73.     C.  858. 
Row.     Row,  bovs,  fore  and  aft,  rhyme  and  chime  !     Ponte  A. 

6  :  411  ;  7  :  56.     C.  996. 
Rubbish.     Rubbish  unutterable   (bear  in  mind  !)  Rubbish  not 

wholly  without  value,  though.     Two  Poets  6  :  84.     C.  861. 
Ruffians,      such  a  gang  of  graceless  ruffians.      Straf.  1  :  157. 

C.  60. 
Ruin,    a  ruin,  Renowned  in  story,  dear  through  youthful  dream  ? 

Red  Cott.  5  :  24.     C.  745. 
Let  partial-ruin  stand  while  ruin  may.  And  serve  world's  use, 

since  use  is  manifold.     Red  Cott.  5  :  26.     C.  746. 
Ruins,     these  ruins  of  humanitv,  This  flesh  worn  out  to  rags 

and  tatters.     Chris.-Eve  4  :  30.     C.  326. 
Ruined.     Whatever   he  touched  is  rightly  ruined  :  plague  It 

caught,  and  disinfection  it  had  craved.     R.  and  B.  3  :276. 

C.  524. 
Ruinous.     Ruinous  truly  should   the  event  play  false.     It  is 

indeed  the  likelier  so  to  do.     R.  and  B.  3  :  172.     C.  483. 
Rule.     In  strength,  intelliijence,  I  rule  the  roast,  Beat,  all  and 

some,  the  ungraced.     Geo.  B.  D.  G  :  322.     C.  962. 
Ruled.     The  Ruled,  well-matched   with  the   Ruling.      Pacch. 

5:320.     C.  803. 
Ruling,     't  is  ungainly  work,  the  ruling  men,  at  best !     Fifine 

4:418.     C.  721. 
Ruling   men   is   vulgar,  easv,  and    ignoble.       Pietro   6:177. 

C.  904. 
Runagate.     The  wife  stood  a  convicted  runagate.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  169.     C.  481. 
Runa'way.     Branded  as  runaway  not  castaway.  Self-sentenced 

and  self-punished  in  the  act  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  84.     C.  447. 
Rush.     Ask  the  rush  if  it  suspects  AVhence  and  how  the  stream 

which  floats  it  had  a  rise.     La  S.  6  :  62.     C.  853. 


s 

Sacred.  Experimentalize  on  sacred  things  !  I  trust  nor  hand 
nor  eye  nor  heart  nor  brain  To  stop  betimes  :  they  all  get 
drunk  alike.     Bishop  B.  4  :  108.     C.  356. 


212  SAD  — SAIXTS 

Sad.     I  am  sad  and  fain  Would  give  up  all  to  be  but  where  I 
was.     Pau.  1:3.     C.  3. 
And  why  should  I  be  sad  or  lorn  of  hope  ?   Para.  1:45.    C.  19. 
Well,  and  what  is  there  to  be  sad  about  ?     The  world 's  the 
world,   life 's   life,   and   nothing  else.      Prince  H.   4  :  355. 
C.  691. 
The   Poet's  age   is  sad:    for  why?      Prol.   A.  6:389;  7:1. 
C.  987. 
Safe,     safe  in  love  as  with  a  charm.     Pippa  1  :  331.     C.  130. 
because  the  solemn  is  safe  too,  The  belfry  proves  a  fortress  of 

a  sort.     R.  and  B.  ^ -.mto.     C.  557. 

too  safe  the  ship,  the  transport  there  and  back  Too  certain  ! 

Fifine  4  :  419.     C.  722. 

Sage.     Must  the  whole  outside  world  in  soul  and  sense  Suffer, 

that  he  grow  sage  at  its  expense  ?    Fr.  Fu.  6  :  339.    C.  909. 

Said.     Then  all  is  said  —  not  much,  if  you  count  words,  Yet  to 

an  understanding  ear  enough.     Z«r/a  2:396.     C.  313. 
Sail.     Winds  belly  sail,  and  drench  of  dancing  brine  Buffet  our 
boat-side,  so  the  prore  bound  free  !   Ari.  A.b  :  104.    C.  030. 
Sailor's.     'T  is   but   a   sailor's  pi'omise,    weather-bound.     Sor. 

1  : 253.     C.  98. 

Sailors.     God  help  you,  sailors,  at  your  need !     J.  Lee  4  :  154. 

C.  373. 
Saint  George,     there  was  A  Princess,  was  a  dragon  belching 

flame.  And  should  have  been  a  Saint  George  also  ?     R.  arid 

B.  3 : 228.     C.  505. 
Saint  Paul.     Saint  Paul   himself   Deplored   the  check  o'  the 

punv  presence,  still  Cheating  his  fulmiuation.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  333.     C.  545. 

Saint  Praxed's.     Peace,  peace  seems  all.     Saint  Praxed's  ever 

was  the  church  for  peace.     St.  Prax.  4  :  89.     C.  348. 
Saint  Scholastica.      Xow,  Saint  Scholastica,  what  time  she 

fared  In  Paynimrie,  behold,  a  lion  glared  —      Dan.  Bar. 

6  :  309.     C.  957. 
Saint.     And  show  the  world  their  saint  in  a  lover's  arms,  No 

matter  how  driven  thither.     R.  and  B.  3  :  121.     C.  462. 
above  the  needs  O'  the  human  nature,  ...  a  saint  above  the 

smack  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  227.     C.  505. 
Will  the   saint  vanish  from  the  sinner  that  repents  ?     Fifine 

4  :  442.     C.  735. 

Saint-like.     I  only  wish  I  were  as  saint-like,  could  contain  me 

so.     R.  and  B.  3  :  61.     C.  438. 
Saint's.     That  stager  in  the  saint's  correct  costume.     Red  Cott. 

5  :  29.     C.  747. 

Saints.      Saints  go  their  rounds,  who  shall  doubt  ?    Master  H. 

2  :  93.     C.  196. 

Saints,  to  do  us  good.  Must  be  in  heaven,  I  seem  to  understand  : 
We  never  find  them  saints  before.   R.  and  B.  3  :  193.    C.  491. 


SAINTS  —  SATAN'S  213 

Saints.     Rome  manufactures  saints  enough  to  know.    R.  and  B. 

3  :  440.     C.  587. 

Till  filthy  saints  rebuked  the  gust  With  wliich  they  chanced 
to  get  a  sight  Of  some  dear  naked  Aphrodite.     Chris.-Eve 

4  :  16.     C.  321. 

Saints   tumble    to   earth   with   so   slight  a  tilt  !     Gold  Hair 

4  :  1G9.     C.  378. 
Saintliness.     saintliness    that's   simply  innocent  Of   guessing 

sinnersliip  exists  to  cure.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  341.     C.  970. 
Saintly.     What  saintly  act  is  done  in  Rome  to-da\'  But  might 

be  prompted  by  the  devil,     it.  and  B.  3  :417.     C.  578. 
Saintship.     Thus   saintship  is   effected  probably  ;  No  sparing 

saints  the  process  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  70.     C.  442. 
Salvation.    It  is  by  no  breath,  Turn  of  eye,  wave  of  hand,  that 

salvation  joins  issue  with  death  !     Saul  2  :  57.     C.  184. 
thou   hast   trucked  Salvation   away  for  lust's  solace  !     Fust 

6  :  3G8.     C.  980. 
Samples,     the    indifferent   product,    all   too   poor   Makeshift, 

starved  samples  of  humanity  !     R.  and  B.  3  ^383.     C.  564. 
Sand,    the  salt  sand  hoar  of  the  great  sea-shore.    Flight  2  :  289. 

C.  271. 
The  sand,  that  dried  the  ink,  not  rubbed  away,  Though  penned 

the  day  whereof  it  tells  the  deed.    R.  and  B.  3  :  463.    C.  596. 
Sands,     last  faint  sands  of  life,  the  frittered  gold,  Fall  noise- 

lesslv,   yet   all   too   fast,    o'  the  cone.     R.  and  B.  3  :  311. 

C.  537. 
sands  in  slab,  Smooth  save  for  pipy  wreath-work  of  the  worm. 

Red  Cott.  5:2.     C.  737. 
Sang,     when  the  night-wind  blew  like  breath,  For  joy  of  one 

day's  voyage  more.  We  sang.     Para.  1  :  96.     C.  38. 
Sapience.     How  were  it,  for  better  or  worse,  didst  thou  grunt 

Contented    with    sapience  —  the   lot   of   the   swine.     Fust 

6  :  381.     C.  985. 
Sapphire,     dewdrop  .  .  .  sucks,  by  dint  of   gaze.  Blue   from 

tlie  sky  and  turns  to  sapphire  so.    R.  and  B.  3  :  324.     C.  542. 
Sappho.     Sappho  survives,  because  we  sing  her  songs.     Clean 

4  :  121.     C.  361. 
Sappho  herself  shall  you  confess  outstript  !    Two  Poets  6  :  100. 

C.  868. 
Saps.     What  slacks  the  tense  nerve,  saps  the  wound-up  spring 

Of  the  act  —     R.  and  B.  3  :  384.     C.  564. 
Sarcasm.    A  pretty  sarcasm  for  the  world  !    R.  and  B.  3  :  232. 

C.  507. 
Satan.    The  guardian  angel  gave  reluctant  place,  Satan  stepped 

forward  with  alacrity.     R.  and  B.  3  :  95.     C.  451. 
Satan's,     the  hackney  chair  Satan  jaunts  forth  with,  shabby  and 

serviceable,  No  gilded  jimcrack-novelty.     R.  and  B.  3  :  128. 

C.  465. 


214 


SATAN'S  —  SAY 


Satan's.     Success  did  seem  not  so  improbable,  But  that  already 

Satan's  laugh  was  heard.     R.  and  B.  3  :  05.     C.  451. 
Satire.    Satire  —  to  burn  aud  purify  the  world.    Ari.A.5:l\l. 

C.  635. 
Piddling  at  so-called  satire  —  weU-advIsed.     Two  Poets  6  :  97. 

C.  867. 
Satirized.    He  held  in  most  awe  whom  he  satirized.    Two  Poets 

6  :  97.     C.  867. 
Satisfaction,     turn  each  sentence  howsoever  he  may,  There  's 

satisfaction  to  extract  therefrom.    R.  and  B.  3  :  134.  C.  467. 
A   satisfaction,   yea,    to  God    Himself !     R.   and   B.  3 :  318. 

C.  540. 
Saturday,     in  God's  good  time,  Which  does  not  always  fall 

on  Saturday  When  the  world  looks  for  wages.     Prince  H. 

4 : 365.     C.  695. 
Savagely.     Last  he  said,  savagely  for  a  good  man  —      R.  and 

B.  3  :  254.     C.  515. 

Save.     I  must  save  A  great  man  from  himself,  nor  see  him 

fling  His  Av  ell-earned  fame  away.     King  C.  1  :  402.    C.  158. 

Such   save  the  world  which    none  but  they  could  save,  Yet 

think  whate'er  they  did,  that  world  could  do.    Lima  2  :  370. 

C.  302. 

the  precious  something  at  perdition's  edge.  He  only  was  pre- 
destinate to  save.     R.  and  B.  3 :  91.     C.  450. 
God,  who  created  her,  will  save  her  too  Some  new  way,  by  one 

miracle  the  more.     R.  and  B.  3  :  212.     C.  498. 
You  save  a  fool  from  tasting  folly's  fruit,  Obtain  small  thanks 

thereby,  and  lose   to  boot    Sagacity's  reward.     Dan.  Bar. 

6  :  305.      C.  956. 
Saved.     And  I  wake  saved.  —  And  yet  it  will  not  be  !     Any 

Wife  2  :  71.     C.  189. 
Saved  for  a  splendid  minute  and  no  more.     R.  and  B.  3  :  14. 

C.  420. 
answered  for  the  inarticulate  babe  At  baptism,  in  its  stead 

declared  the  faith.  And  saved  what  else  would  perish.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  162.     C.  478. 
I  am  saved  through  him  So  as  by  fire  ;  to  him  —  thanks  and 

farewell  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  276.    "C.  524. 
saved  :  how  long  ?     For  his   whole  life  :  how  niuch  is  that 

whole  life  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  387.     C.  566. 
you  saved  me  — saved  in  vain  If  you  ruined  yourself,  and  all 

through  me  !      Worst  4  :  170.     C.  378. 
Sa"wr.     in  a  sheet  of  flame  I  saw  them  and  I  knew  them  all. 

Childe  R.  2  :  336.     C.  289. 
She  saw  things  i)lain  as  Gods  do  :  by  one  stroke  O'  the  sword 

that  rends  the  life-long  veil  away.     Balau.  4  :280.     C.  609. 
Say.     So  much  to  say.  And  the  flesh  fails,  now,  and  the  time  is 

come.  And  one  false  step  no  way  to  be  repaired.      Straf. 

1 :  139.     C.  53. 


SAY  — SCIOLIST  215 

Say.     All  say  good  words  To  who  will  hear,  all  do  thcrel)y  bad 

deeds  To  who  must  uiidergo.     It.  and  B.  3  :  367.     C.  o58. 
Says,     he  somehow  thinks,  And  anyliow  says  :  't  is  truth  ;  he 

dares  not  lie  !     Others  should  do  the  lying.      R.  and  B. 

3:413.     C.  576. 
Scamper.     A  scamper  o'er  the  breezy  wolds  Sets  all  to-rights. 

Straf.l-.lSb.     C.  71. 
Scandal,     they  noised  abroad  Not  merely  the  main  scandal  of 

her  birth.  But  slanders  written,  printed.     11.  and  B.  3  :  47. 

C.  433. 
Here's   troublesomeness,  scandal   on    both    sides.   Plenty   of 

fault  to  find,  no  absolute  crime.     R.  and  B.  3  :  59.     C.  437. 
—  More  scandal,  and  against  a  priest  this  time  !     R.  and  B. 

3  :  255.     C.  516. 

Scar.     If  two  lives  join,  there  is  oft  a  sear,  They  are  one  and 
one,  with  a  shadowy  third.     B)j  Fire.  2  :  66.     C.  187. 
a  scar  ?     Scarcely  disfigurement,  rather  a  grace  Making  for 
manhood.     Rosny  6  :  390  ;  7  :4.     C.  987. 

Scars.     A  sullen  subject  would  have   nursed  the  scars.     Red 
Cott.  5  :  73.     C.  764. 

Scare.     I  am  past  the  prime,  I  scare  the  woman-world,  Done- 
with  that  way.     R.  and  B.  3  :426.     C.  581. 

Scheme,     they  yet  were  cherishing  a  scheme.  All  of  their  hon- 
est country  homespun  wit.     R.  and  B.  3  :442.     C.  588. 

Schemes.      Schemes    of  life,   its   best   rules   and   right   uses. 
Saul  2  :  52.     C.  181. 

Schemed,      doubtlessly  ere  he  could  draw  All  points  to  one, 
he  must  have  schemed  !     Count  G.  2  :  235.     C.  252. 

Scholar.     Naught  so  worth  the   gaining   As  an  apt  scholar  ! 
Para.  1  :  65.     C.  27. 
You,  all  accomplished,  courted  everywhere,  The  scholar  and 

the  gentleman.     A  Blot  2  :  172.     C.  228. 
the  restive  scholar  I  had  driven  to    Wisdom's  goal,  I  wis. 

Pamho  6  :  236.     C.  928. 
The  all-accomplished  scholar,  twelve  years  old.    Dev.  6  :  429  ; 
7  :  91.     C.  1003. 

Scholar's.      he    o'er-refines  —  the    scholar's    fault!       Colomhe 
2  :  202.     C.  239. 

Scholars,      all   his   scholars  —  cruel-kind    were   the)' !      Jocli. 
6 : 218.     C.  921. 

School,     wheresoever  life  resume  School  interrupted  by  vaca- 
tion —  death.     Red  Cott.  5  :  96.     C.  773. 

Schumann.      Schumann's    our    music-maker   now.      Dh   At. 

4  :  174.     C.  379. 

Schumann's  self  was  no  worse  contrapimtist.     Parch.  5  :  330. 
C.  806. 
Sciolist.     — shall   a  sciolist   affect   to  see?      Family  6:247. 
C.  932. 


216 


SCIROCCO  —  SEA 


Scirocco.  —  If  't  were  proper,  Sciroeco  should  vanish  In 
bhick  from  the  skies  !     Englishm.  2  :  2()3.     C.  2G2. 

Score.  The  cold  black  score,  mere  music  for  the  mind.  R. 
and  B.  3 -.28.     C.  425. 

Scorn.      The  furnace-coals  alike  of   public  scorn,  Private  re- 
morse, heaped  glowing   on  his  head.     It.  and  B.  3 :  372. 
C.  560. 
minded  to  embitter  scathe  by  scorn.     Ari.  A.  5  :239.     C.  680. 
The  lady's  proud  pale  queenliness  of  scorn,     /nn  .4.  5:291. 
C.  792. 

Scorned.  What  he  scorned.  His  life-long,  need  I  touch,  of- 
fend my  foot.     .4n. /1.5:135.     C.  642. 

Scorpion.  Let  a  scorpion  nip.  And  never  mind  till  he  con- 
torts his  tail  I     R.  and  B.  3  :  62.     C.  438. 

Scotland.  The  cause  of  Scotland,  England's  cause  as  well. 
Straf.  1:132.     C.  50. 

Scrannel,  you  miss  the  very  tones  o'  the  voice,  The  scrannel 
pipe  that  screams  in  heights  of  head.  R.  and  B.  3 :  27. 
C.  425. 

Scratched.  Scratched  out  his  ej'es  and  scratched  them  in 
again.     Ari.  ^.  5  :  124.     C.  638. 

Scrawlings.  — Like  a  schoolboy's  scrawlings  in  and  out  Dis- 
tasteful lesson-book.     Epil.  Pacch.  5  :  393.     C.  829. 

Screw,  somewhere  must  a  screw  be  slack  !  Red  Colt.  5  :  35. 
C.  749. 

Scripture,  you  have  to  plead  before  these  priests  And  poke  at 
them  with  Scripture,  or  you  pass  For  heathen.  R.  and  B. 
3:318.     C.  540. 

Scruple,  scruple  of  the  better  sense  that  finds  An  orb  within 
each  halo.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  332.     C.  966. 

Scruples,  dolts  who  dallied  with  their  scruples,  fenced  "With 
subterfuge.     Doctor  6  :  184.     C.  907. 

Scullions,  let  two  ghastly  scullions  concoct  mess  With  brim- 
stone, pitch,  vitriol  and  devil's-dung.  R.  and  B.  3  :  122. 
C.  462. 

Sea.     Writes  the  sea  The  secret  of  her  yearning  in  vast  caves. 
Para.  1:36.     C.  16. 
Round  the  cape  of  a  sudden  came  the  sea.     Parting  2  :  21. 

C.  170. 

The  gray  sea  and  the  long  black  land.    Meeting  2  :  21.    C.  170. 

The  sea  heaves  up,  hangs  loaded  o'er  the  land.  Breaks  there 

and  buries  its  tumultuous  strength.     Luria  2  :  369.     C.  302. 

like  a  ghost  disshrouded,  white  the  sea.     R.  and  B.  3  :  403. 

C.  572. 
where  the  earth-shell  scallops  out  the  sea,  A  sweep  of  semi- 
circle.    Red  Cott.  5  :  14.  C.  741. 
The  sea,  ...  So  sleeps  and  sets  to  slumber  that  broad  blue  ! 
Red  Cott.  5  :  14.     C.  741. 


SEA  — SEEING  217 

Sea.      The  sea  lay  out  at  distance  crammed  by  cloud  Into  a 
leaden  wedge.     Red  Colt.  5  :  53.     C.  loG. 
sea,  .  .  .  watery  plural  vastitude.     Ari.  A.  5  :99.     C.  028. 
ebbing,  ...  all  thwart  and  loth,  Sea   claws   at   sand  relin- 
quished strugglingly.     Ari.  A.  o -.239.     C.  G80. 
press  to  other  earth,  new  heaven,  by  sea  That  somehow  ever 
prompts  to  'scape  despair.     Ari.  A.  5  :240.     C.  681. 
Sea-duck,     as  a  sea-duck  flies  and  swims  At  once,  so  came  the 

light  craft  up.      Waring  2  :  274.     C.  266. 
Sea-eagle.     Phene,    which     is,    by    interpretation,    sea-eagle. 

Pijjpa  l:3i2.     C.  135. 
Sea's.     The  wroth  sea's  waves  are  edged  With  foam,  white  as 
the  bitten  lip  of  hate.     Para.  1: 116.     C.  46. 
storm-stirred  sea's  assault  On  the  swilled  rock-ridge.     Chris. 
Sm.  6  :  315.     C.  960. 
Seas,     through  icy  seas.  The  blind  night  seas  without  a  saving 

star.     5or.  1:241.     C.  93. 
Second-nature.     Such  power  has  second-nature,  men  call  use. 
That  undelightful  objects  get  to  charm.     R.  and  B.  3  :  348. 
C.  551. 
Secret,     triumph  o'er  a  secret  wrung  from  nature's  close  re- 
serve.    Toccata  2  :  36.     C.  175. 
Tell   them  the   long-kept   secret,    old    and   young !      Druses 

2  :  103.     C.  200. 
A  secret  which  this  life  finds  hard  to  keep.  And,  often  guessed, 

is  never  quite  revealed.     R.  and  B.  3  :  374.     C.  560. 
Oh,  there  's  no  secret  I  were  best  conceal  !     Bea.  Sig.  6  :  415  ; 
7  :  63.     C.  997. 
Secrets.     Broods  o'er  a  bag  of  secrets,  all  unbroached.   Be- 
neath  the   bosom   of    the    placid   deep.      Red    Cott.    5  : 3. 
C.  737. 
'Tis  God  Must  bear  such  secrets  and  disclose  them.     Inn  A. 
5  :  296.     C.  794. 
Sects.     A  value  for  religion's  self,  A   carelessness  about   the 

sects  of  it.     Chris.-Eve  4  :26.     C.  325. 
See.     Something   to   see,  by  Bacchus,  something  to  hear,   at 
least !     Up  —  Down  2  :  32.     C.  174. 
More  of  you  seems  yet  to  reach  :  I  stay  for  what  I  just  begin 

to  see.     Luria  2  :  401.     C.  314. 
Come,  I  must  go  myself  and  see  to  things  :    I  cannot  stay 

much  longer  stewing  here.     Pi,,  and  B.  3  :  310.     C.  537. 
None   see   themselves ;    another   sees  them    best.      In  a   B. 
4  :  139.     C.  367. 
Sees,     through  the  place  he  sees,  A  place  is  signified  he  never 
saw.  But,  if   he  lack  not  soul,  may  learn  to  know.     Red 
Cott.  5:2.     C.  737. 
Seeing.     What  was  there  to  balk  Us,  who  had  eyes,  from  see- 
ing ?     Ger.  de  L.6:  345.     C.  971. 


218  SEED  —  SELF-SACRIFICE 

Seed,     never  was  so  plain  a  truth  As  that  God  drops  his  seed 

of  heavenly  Hanie  Just  where  He  wills  on  earth.     Prince  H. 

4  :  374.     C,  091). 
Each  soul  sows  a  seed  — ...  Seed  bears  crop,  scarce  within 

our  little  lives.     Ari.  A.  5  :  '232.     C.  678. 
as  fares  the  meteor-mass,  Whereof  no  particle  but  holds  inert 

Some  seed.     Joch.  0  :  222.     C.  922. 
Seeking,     throws  himself  on  God,  and  imperplexed   Seeking 

shall  find  liim.     Grom.  Fun.  2  :  312.     C.  280. 
Seemed,     gained  Knowledge  by  notice,  not  by  giving  ear,  — 

attained   To  truth   by  what  men  seemed,  not  said  :  Fijine 

4  :  428.     C.  727. 
Seemings.      tliink  On  the  world's  seemings  and  realities.     A 

Blot  2  :  107.     C.  220. 
Seemly.     The   seemly  lurks  inside  the  abominable.      Ari.  A. 

5 : 102.     C.  053. 
Seen.     What   was  once    seen,  grows  what   is   now  described, 

Then  talked  of,  told  about,  a  tinge  the  less  In  every  fresh 

transmission.     B.  and  B.  3  :  458.     C.  594. 
Self-apologist,     all  Told  as  befits  the  self-apologist.     Prince 

i/.  4:358.     C.  092. 
Self-conceit.     Such  piece  of  self-conceit  as  serves  for  perch 

Because  you  chose  it,  so  it  must  be  safe.     Sludge  4  :  224. 

C.  398. 
They  've  fed  fat  Their  self-conceit  which  else  had  starved  : 

Sludge  4  :  237.     C.  404. 
Self-consciousness.     I  profess  To  know  just  one  fact — my 

self-cousciousness.     Fr.  Fu.  0  :  330.     C.  908. 
Self-defence.     Why  did  you  put  us  upon  self-defence  ?     You 

well  knew  what  prompt  pass-word  would  appease.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  448.     C.  590. 

Self-display,     this  impulsive  and  prompt  self-display  !     Ever 
such  tax  comes  of  the  foolish  youth.      R.  and  B.  3  :  381. 

C.  5«;3. 

Self-interest.     If  vou  trip,  I  fall  ;  'T  is  in  self-interest  I  speak. 

Luria  2  :  363.    'C.  299. 
Self -laudation.     Kone  of  the  self-laudation,  vulgar  brag.  Vain- 
glorious rivals  cultivate  so  much  !    Ari.  A.  5  :  124.     C.  038. 
Self-possession.     Tliis  self-possession  .  .  .  How  does  it  dilt'er 

.  .  •  From  the  terrible  patience  of  God  ?    R.  and  B.  3  :  434. 

C.  585. 
Self-sacrifice.     Self-sacrifice,  —  What  if  an  idol  took  it  ?     R. 

and  B.  3  :  381.     C.  503. 
So  is  intelligence  ;  let  love  be  so.  Unlimited  in  its  self-sacrifice. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  380.     C.  505. 
evidence  In  that  compressed  mouth,  those  strained  nostrils, 

steadfast    eyes   Of    utter  passion,   absolute   self-sacrifice. 

Fijine  ^-.'^2.     C.  713. 


SELF-SACRIFICE  —  SENTENCE  21 9 

Self-sacrifice,     that  self-sacrifice  in  men  which  solves  Tlie  rid- 
dle —  Wherein  differs  Man  from  beast  ?   Jock.  0  :  222.    C.  922. 
Self-suflRciency.     to   get   Acquaintance  witli    the  way  o'   the 
workl,   we  must  nor  fret  Nor  fume,   on  altitudes  of  self- 
sufficiency.     Fijine  4: -ASl.     C.  729. 
Selfish.     The  pair  had  nobody  but  themselves  to  blame,  Being 

selfish  beasts  throughout.     R.  and  B.  3  :  121.     C.  462. 
Selfishness.     My  selfishness  is  satiated  not,  It  wears  me  like  a 
flame.     Pau.  1  :  15.     C.  7. 
I  'm  with  you  :  selfishness  is  best  again.     I  thought  of  turning 

honest  —  what  a  dream  !     Colonihe  2  :  211.     C.  243. 
when  years  should  do  their  work  And  reinforce  the  selfishness 
inside  Until  it  pushed  the  last  disguise  away  :    Balau.  4  :  297. 
C.  615. 
Semblance.    Of  all  that  courtier-company  not  one  But  left  the 
semblance  for  the  actual  sun.      Two  Poets  6  :  87.     C.  863. 
When  shall  we  rest  upon  the  thing  itself  Not  on  its  semblance  ? 
Bean-St.  6  :  277.     C.  944. 
Sermon-time.     Take  the  church-road,  for  the  bell's  due  chime 
Gives  us  the  summons  —  't  is  sermon-time  !    Hohj-C.  2  :  31G. 
C.  281. 
Sense,     he  flourishes  wit  and  common  sense,  They  fail  him,  — 
he  plies  logic  doughtily.     R.  and  B.  3  :  140.     C.  470. 
a  half-grotesque  Half-ominous,  wholly  enigmatic  sense,  Like 

any  by-word.     R.  and  B.  3  :  267.     C.  520. 
simple  sober  sense,  That  asks,  before  it  finishes  with  a  dog. 
Who  taught  the  dog  that  trick.    R.  and  B.  3  :  425.    C.  581. 
We  seek  to  tickle  sense  —  they  ask  for  soul.  As  if  soul  had  no 

higher  ends  to  serve  !     Red  Cott.  5  :  33.     C.  748. 
But  ah,  the  sense,  ye  gods,  the  weightv  sense  !     Inn  yl.  5  :  243. 

C.  773. 
one  mere  eye-cast  at  the  character  Of  AVho  made  these  and 

gave  man  sense  to  boot.     Inn  A.  5  :284.     C.  790. 
that    thrice-superfine    Feminity   of   sense.      Numph.  5 :  350. 

C.  814. 
Sense,  not  soul,  accomplished  sight.     Forgiv.  5  :  364.     C.  819. 
Sense  quenching  Soul  !     Epil.  Plot-C.  6  :267.     C.  940. 
Sense,  penetrating  as  through  rind  to  pith.    Chris.  S7n.  6  :  315. 

C.  960. 
Friends,  beware  lest  fume  Off uscate  sense.     Chris.  Sin.  6  :  318. 
C.  961. 
Sensitive.     An  infant  born  perchance  as  sensitive  and  nice  As 

any  soul  of  you,  proud  dames.     Fijine  4  :  391.     C.  706. 
Sensual,     determine  to  call  a  more  sensual  instinct  by  as  few 

fine  names  as  possible.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :352.     C.  295. 
Sentence,     a    sentence  passed  .  .  .  Which   nothing  balks    of 
swift  and  sure  effect  But  absence  of  the  guilty.     R.  and  B. 
3 : 139.     C.  470. 


220  SENTENCE  —  SHAKESPEARE 

Sentence.     Not  on  the  vulgar  mass  Called  "  work,"  must  sen- 
tence pass.     Ben  Ezra  4  :  189.     C.  385. 
Sententiousness.     what's  a  polished  period  worth,  Filed  curt 

sententiousness  of  loaded  line.     An.  A.  5: 142.     C.  G45. 
Seraphic.     Wax-white,  seraphic,  saturate  with  the  sun  O'  the 

morning.     R.  and  B.  3  :  223.     C.  503. 
Serenest.      Serenest  of   the   progeny  of   God.       Sor.    1  :  201. 

C.  78. 
Serpent's.     I  had  stumbled,  first  thing,  on  the  serpent's  head 

Coiled  with  a  leer  at  foot  of  it.     R.  and  B.  3  :  179.     C.  48G. 
Serpentining,     by  damp  Blind  disused  serpentining  ways  afar. 

Forgiv.  5  :  363.     C.  818. 
Servant.     And  cites  for  proof  a  servant,  eye  that  watched  And 

ear   that   opened   to   purse  secrets  up.     R.  and   B.  3 :  92. 

C.  450. 
Serve.     If  I  can  serve  mankind  'T  is  well  ;  but  there  our  inter- 
course must  end.     Para.  1:41.     C.  17. 
What  woman  were  you  used  to  serve  this  way,  Be  kind  to,  till 

I  called  you  and  you  came  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  216.     C.  500. 
W^ho  keeps  one  end  in  view  makes  all  things  serve.     In  a  B. 

4:146.     C.  370. 
Served.     I  never  will  be  served  by  those  I  serve.     Para.  1:41. 

C.  17. 
Service.     All  service  ranks  the  same  with  God.     Pippa  1:331. 

C.  130. 
Servitude.     Born   for  no  mastery,  but  servitude.     Red    Cott. 

5  :  76.     C.  765. 

Set.     Set  above  sin,  beyond  his  fellows  here  :    R.  and  B.  3  :  365. 

C.  557. 
Sevenths.     Those  commiserating  sevenths  — "  Life  might  last ! 

we  can  but  try  !  "     Toccata  2  :  35.     C.  175. 
Seventy.     What  a  load  he  stumbles  under  through  his  glad, 

sad  seventy  years.     La  S.  6  :  69.     C.  856. 
much  less  had  its  seventy  broke  One  whipcord  nerve  in  the 

muscly  mass  from  neck  to  shoulder-blade.     Hal.  and  Hob 

6  :  129.     C.  880. 

Shade.     Measure  your  mind's  height   by   the  shade  it  casts  ! 

Para.  1 :  80.     C.  32. 
Shadovy.      a  thing's  shadow  or  a  name's  mere  echo   Suffices 
those  who   miss   the   name  and   thing  !     In  a  B.   4:  :  138. 
C.  366. 
The  shadow  inching  round  those  ferny  feet.     Inn  A.  5:275. 
C.  786. 
Shakespeare.     A  thousand  poets  pried  at  life.  And  only  one 
.  .  .  Rose  to  be  Shakespeare.      Chris.-Eve  4  :  23.     C.  324. 
Did  Shakespeare  ?     If  so,  the  less  Shakespeare  he  !     House 

5  :  337.     C.  809. 
Our  Shakespeare  and   Milton  .  .  .  they  reign  supreme  o'er 


SHAKESPEARE  —  SHOULDER-BLADES        221 

the    weaker  race  That   wants    the  ancient   grace  !      Epil. 

Pacch.  5  :  390.     C.  828. 
Shakespeare.     Shakespeare  !  —  to  such  name's  sounding,  what 

succeeds  Fitly  as  silence  ?     Names  C.  947. 
Shallow.     How  you  stare  —  Shallow,  for  all  the  deep  books  on 

your  shelves  !     Doctor  6  :  184.     C.  907. 
Sham,     simulated  monolith  —  Sham   love  in  due  degree  with 

homage  blent  As  sham.      Two  Poets  G  :  101.     C.  868. 
Shame.    God's  shame  On  those  that  bring  our  Order  ill  repute  ! 

Druses  2  :  104.     C.  200. 
Shame  winds  me  with  her  tether  round  and  round  !     Druses 

2  :  115.     C.  204. 
Shame  Fall  presently  on  who  deserves  it  most  !     Soul's   Tr. 

2  :  340.     C.  290. 

Covered  my  loudest  cry  for  human  aid  With  this  enormous 
paving-stone  of  shame.     R.  and  B.  3  :  174.     C.  483. 

And  rise  with  something  of  a  rosy  shame  Into  immortal  nak- 
edness :     R.  and  B.  3  :  210.     C.  498. 

There  blazed  the  glory,  tliere  shot  black  the  shame  !     Ari.  A. 
5  :  233.     C.  678. 

May  I  go  Burn  to  the  ashes,  now  my  shame  you  know  ?     For- 
giv.  5  :  364.     C.  819. 

Shall  I  permit  my  sense  an  Eye-viewed  shame,  Broad  daylight 
perpetration.     Plot-C.  6  :  266.     C.  940. 
Shames.     So  should  the  heaped-up  shames  go  shuddering  back 

O'  the  head  o'  the  heapers.     R.  and  B.  3  :  84.     C.  447. 
Sham.ed.     Sinner  that  I  stand,  shamed  in  the  walk  and  gait 

1  have  practiced  and  grown  old  in,  bv  a  child  !     R.  and  B. 

3  :  138.     C.  469. 

Share.     At  worst  I  have  performed  my  share  of  the  task  ;  The 

rest  is  God's  concern.     Para.  1  :48.     C.  20. 
Sheath.     Empty  and  fine  like  a  swordless  sheath.     Stat.  a7id  B. 

2  :  322.     C.  284. 

Shine,     let  her  shine  Lustrous  and  lonely,  so  best  serving  him  ! 

Pillar  6  :  271.     C.  941. 
Ship.     Many  the  loaded  ship  self-sunk  through  treasure-freight. 

Fifine  4: -.^IG.     C.  720. 
Ships.     For  some  ships,  safe  in  port  indeed.  Rot  and  rust,  Run  to 

dust,  All  through  worms  i'  the  wood.    ./.  Lee  4  :  154.     C.  373. 
Shivered,     for  the  customarv  warmth,  Two  tapers  shivered  on 

the  altar.     R.  and  B.  3  :  247.     C.  512. 
Shop.     Because  a  man  has  shop  to  mind  .  .  .  Needs  spirit  lack 

all  life  behind,   .  .  .  All  loves  except  what  trade  can  give  ? 

Shop  5  :  341.     C.  810. 
Should,     what  he   should  have   been.   Could  be,  and  was  not. 

Sor.  1 :  325.     C.  127. 
Shoulder-blades.      Those   morbid    olive    faultless    shoulder- 
blades.     Plppa  1  :  338.     C.  133. 


222  SHOUT  —  SILENCE 

Shout.  —  one  whose  shout  Would  raise  the  dead  down  in  the 
catacombs,  Much  more  the  city-watch.  R.  and  B.  3  :  439. 
C.  586. 

Sho'w.     One,  at  least,  not  the  utter  fool  of  show.     Para.  1 :  66. 
C.  27. 
meet  Needs  must  it  be  that  show  on  the  outside  correspond  With 

inward  substance.     F'ljine  4:400.     C.  711. 
the  envious  scale  Which  hides  the  truth  of  things  and  substi- 
tutes Deceptive  show.     Joch.  6  :  225.     C.  924. 
All  outside  show,  in  short,  is  sham  —  why  wince?    Geo.  B.  D. 
6  :  320.     C.  962. 
Mi<;ht  I  die  last  and  show  thee  !     Any  Wife  2  :  70.     C.  188. 

Shrill.  I  hear  The  hoarse  shrill  throat,  see  shut  eyes,  neck 
shot-forth.     R.  and  B.  3  :  284.     C.  527. 

Shrinks.  Rather,  he  shrinks  up  like  the  ambiguous  fish.  De- 
taches flesh  from  shell.     R.  and  B.  3  :  367.     C.  558. 

Shrug.  There  was  the  blameless  shrug,  permissible  smirk, 
The  pen's  pretence  at  play  with  the  pursed  mouth.  R.  and 
B.  3  :  189.     C.  489. 

Shut.  I  shut  my  eyes  and  turned  them  on  my  heart.  Childe 
R.  2  :  332.     C.  287. 

Sick.  He  's  sick  of  his  life's  supper,  —  swallowed  lies  :  So, 
hobbling  bedward,  needs  must  ease   his  maw.     it.  and  B. 

3  :  406.     C.  573. 

Be   sick  by  stealth.  Nor  traffic  with  disease  —  malingering  in 

health  !     Fifine  4 :  415.     C.  720. 
"You  are  sick,  that's  sure,"  —  thev  say  :  "Sick  of  what?" 
—  they  disagree.     Prol.  Dra.  I.  2'd  6  :  153.     C.  892. 
Sienese.     the  imaginative   Sienese  Great   in  the  scenic  back- 
grounds.    R.  and  B.3:2.     C.  415. 
Sigh.     Who   seest   the    wider   but   to   sigh   the  more.     Clean 

4  :  121.     C.  360. 

Ah,  the  slow  shake  of  head,  the  melancholy  smile,  The  sigh 
almost  a  sob  !     Fifine  4  :388.     C.  704. 

Sight.  The  last  time  in  this  life  :  not  one  sight  since,  Never 
another  sight  to  be  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  224.     C.  504. 

Sights.  God  has  conceded  two  sights  to  a  man  —  One,  of  men's 
whole  work,  time's  completed  plan.  The  other,  of  the  min- 
ute's work,  man's  first  Step  to  the  plan's  completeness  : 
Sor.  1  :  286.     C.  111. 

Sign.  Look  through  the  sign  to  the  thing  signified.  Ber.de  M. 
6  :  299.     C.  954. 

Silence,     well,  go  silence  with  the  rest  Of  the  world's  good  ! 
SonPs  Tr.  2  :  337.     C.  289. 
Dumb  lip  consort  with  desecrated  brow.  Silence  become  his- 
toriographer.    R.  and  B.  3  :  339.     C.  548. 
just  taking  thought  to  breathe  again,  Taste  the  sweet  sudden 
silence  all  about.     R.  and  B.  3  :  430.     C.  583. 


SILENCE  — SIN-  223 

Silence.     Half  life,  —  silence,  while  yoii  learn  What  has  been 
done  ;    the    other   half,  —  attempt   At   speech.      Red  Cott. 
5  :  48.     C.  754. 
Chatting  and  chirping  sunk  inconsciously  To  silence,  nay,  un- 
easiness, at  length  Alarm.     Bed  Cott.  5  :  59.     C.  758. 
Silence  pursued  the  words.     Ari.  A.  o  :  178.      C.  (559. 
Tiiere  's  repose  Or,  at  least,  silence  when  misfortune  seems  All 

that  one  has  to  bear.     Inn  /I.  5  :  267.     C.  783. 
One  grace  of  humbleness  absents  itself  —  Silence  !  yet  love 

ii  's  (Iciper  than  all  words.     Inn  A.  5  :  290.     C.  792. 
Rich-paviiioned,  rather,  —  still  the  world  without,  —  Inside  — 
gold-roofed  silk-walled  silence.    Epil.  Eagle  6  :  241.    C.  930, 
So   I   felt  "To   keep   silence    were    folly:"  —  all   language 

above,  I  made  love.     Epil.  Cher.  G  :  2G5.     C.  939. 
Silence  't  is  awe  decrees.     Prol.  /I.  6  :  390  ;  7  : 2.     C.  987. 
Silent,     mav  be  cool  who  can,  silent  who  will  —  Some   have  a 
gift  that"  way  !     Straf.  1  :  130.     C.  50. 
Silent  ?  —  Pol.    As  the  wronged  are.    King  C.  1  :  395.    C.  156. 
AVhy  are  you  silent  when  so  manv  times  I  turn  and  speak  to 
you  ?     'SouVs  Tr.  2  :  337.     C.  289. 
Silk.     We  don't  card  silk  with  comb  that  dresses  wool.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  286.     C.  528. 
Silken.     A  breed  of  silken  creatures  lurk  and  thrive  In  your 

contempt.     Slraf.  1  :  153.     C.  59. 
Silver.     Just  for  a  handful  of  silver  he  left  us.     Lost  Z.  2  : 3. 

C.  164. 
Silver-gray.     All   is  silver-gray  Placid  and  perfect  with  my 

art  :  the  worse  !     Andrea  4  :  85.     C.  346. 
Simper,     to  pose  and  posture  and  engage  The  priceless  female 

simper.     Geo.  B.  D.  6  :320.     C.  962. 
Simplicity.     Admire  the  man's  simplicity.     "  I  '11  do  this,  I  '11 
not  have  that,  I  '11  punish  and  prevent  !  "     R.  and  B.  3  :  52. 
C.  434. 
Rustic  simplicitv,  uncorrupted  youth,  Ignorant  virtue  !     R. 
and  B.  3  :  373."    C.  560. 
Sin.     I  am  knit  round  As  with  a  charm  by  sin  and  lust  and  pride. 
Pan.  1  :  21.     C.  9. 
sin  Which  steals  back  softly  on  a  soul  half  saved.    Pan.  1  :  24. 

C.  11. 
Better  sin  the  whole  sin,  sure  that  God  observes  ;  Then  go 

live  his  life  out  !     Before  2  :  86.     C.  193. 
And  the  sin  I  impute  to  each  frustrate  ghost  Is  —  the  unlit 

lamp  and  the  ungirt  loin.     Stat,  and  B.  2  :  328.     C.  286. 
Little   sin,  by  none   at   all.   Were   properly  condcnnied   for 
great :  but  great,   Bv  greater,  dwindles  into  small  again. 
R.  and  B.  3  :  337.      C.  547. 
sin  o'  the  slv,  henceforth  !  The  law  stands  though  the  letter 
kills.     R.  and  B.  3  :  447.     C.  590. 


224  SIN  — SINGIXG 

Sin.     And  all  their  striving  turned  to  sin.     Joh.  Agri.  4 :  72. 
C.  341. 
Is  not  His  love  at  issue  still  with  sin,  Visibly  when  a  wrong 

is  done  on  earth  ?     Death  in  D.  4  :  196.     C.  387. 
Judas  the  Damned  would  never  have  dared  such  a  sin  as  I 

dream  !     Mar.  Rel.  6  :  123.     C.  877. 
if  we  broke  Your  lump  of  leavened  sin,  the  loaf's  first  crumb 

would  choke  !     Ned  B.  G  :  147.     C.  890. 
why  permits  He  evil  to  Himself  —  Man's  sin,  accounted  such  ? 

Mihrab  6  :  253.     C.  935. 
True,  I  thank  God,  I  ever  said  "  you  sin,"  when  a  man  did 

sin.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  339.     C.  290. 
Shall   wives    sin   and   enjoy  impunity  ?     R.    and   B.   3 :  295. 
C.  531. 
Sins.     Men  I  helped  to  their  sins,  help  me  to  their  God.    Holy- 
C.  2  :  318.     C.  282. 
grim  black-panelled  chamber  blinks  As  though  rubbed  shiny 
with  the  sins  of  Rome  Told  the  same  oak.     R.  and  B.  3  :  24. 
C.  424. 
Otherwise,  sins  commuted  as  before,  Without  the  least  abate- 
ment in  the  price,     isl.  and  B.  3  :  45.     C.  432. 
Sinful.     All  of  us  sinful,  all   with  need  of  grace,  All  chary  of 

our  life.     R.  and  B.  3  :  360.     C.  555. 
Sinless.     I  humble  me,  but  venture  to  submit  —  What  pre- 
vents sin,  itself  is  sinless,  sure  :  R.  and  B.  3  :  337.     C.  547. 
Sinned.     He  has  done  well.     I  would  have  sinned,  had  I  been 
strong  enough.  As  he  has  sinned.     Para.  1  :  111.     C.  44. 
I  sinned,  soid-entoiled  by  the  tether  of  sense.     Fust  6 :  377. 
C.  984. 
Sinner,     then,  some  sage  acquaint  The  simple  —  which  holds 

sinner,  which  holds  saint !     Bifur.  5  :  347.     C.  812. 
Sinnership.     Tends  to  the  reconciling  us,  no  saints.  To  siuner- 

sliip,  immunity  and  all.     R.  and  B.  3  :  70.     C.  442. 
Sinning,     sinning  soul  secure  From  all  foes  save  itself,  soul's 

truliest  foe.     R.  and  B.  3  :  470.     C.  598. 
Sincere.     No  doubt,  in  what  he  said  that  night,  sincere  !     Ari. 

^.5:231.     C.  677. 
Sinew.     One   summons  of   the   whole   magnifie   frame,   Each 

sinew  to  its  service.     Balau.  4  :  310.     C.  620. 
Sing.     Respect  all  such  as  sing  when  all  alone  !     Para.  1  :  62. 
C.  25. 
I  can't  be  silent  ;  I  must  speak  :  or  sing  —  How  natural  to 

sing  now  !     SouVs  Tr.  2  :  346.     C.  293. 
Sing  on,  ever  sing.  Chirp  till  thou  burst !  —  the  fool  cicada's 
fate.     Joch.  6  :  226.     C.  924. 
Singing.     Have  we  withered  or  agonized  ?  W4iy  else  was  the 
pause   prolonged   but   that  singing   might   issue    thence  ? 
AU  V.  4  :  185.     C.  383. 


SINGLE  — SLEEP  225 

Single.     Bitterly   we   re-embrace,   Single    still.      In   a    Year 

2  :  82.     C.  192. 

Sink.     And  is  it  not  the  bitterer  to  tliiiik  That  disengage  our 

hands  and  thou  wilt  sink.     Any  Wife  2  :  08.     C.  188. 
Filtered  into  by  every  noisome  drain  —  Society's  sink  toward 

which  all  moisture  runs.    R.  and  B.  3  :  162.    C.  479. 
Sinking,     a  sinking   at   the    lower  abdomen  Begins   the   day 

with  indifferent  omen.     Flight  2  :  297.     C.  274. 
Sisuphos.     Sisuphos,  teaches  thy  stone  —  Tantalos,  teaches  thy 

thirst.     Ixion  6  :  208.     C.  916. 
Sit.     Would  I  could  sit  here  And  let  things  right  themselves. 

King  C.  1  :  397.     C.  156. 
Sixtus.      He    was   the    man  —  Pope   Sixtus,   that   Fifth,    that 

swineherd's  son.     Bean-F.  6  :  403  ;  7  :  35.     C.  992. 
Skill,    with  skill  Goes  love  to  show  skill  for  skill's  sake.    Inn  A. 

5  :  252.     C.  777. 
Skin-deep.     A  skin-deep  matter,  scratch  that  leaves  no  scar. 

R.and  B.^:ol.     C.  436. 
Skirts.    You  draw  back  skirts  from  filth  like  her  Who,  possibly, 

braves   scorn,   if,   scorned,  she   minister   To   age.      Fijine 

4 : 391.     C.  706. 
Skit,     some  off-hand  and  jaunty  fling,  some  skit.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  304.     C.  534. 

Skulks.    There  skulks  crime  Behind  law  called  in  to  back  cow- 
ardice !     R.  and  B.  3  :  371.     C.  559. 
Sky.     from   marge   to   blue   marge  The  whole   sky  grew  his 

targe.     Instans  2  :  242.     C.  25.5. 
here  's  no  such  strawy  blaze,  But  sky  wide  ope,  sun,  moon,  and 

seven  stars  out  full-flare  !     Ned  B.  6  :  146.     C.  889. 
Sky-space,     that  sky-space  of  water,  ray  for  ray  And  star  for 

star.     Sor.  1  :  319.     C.  125. 
Slave.     If  thou  canst  find  no  place  for  him.  He  shall  be  king 

elsewhere,  and  I  will  be  His  slave  forever.     There  are  two 

of  us.     Para.  1  :  111.     C.  44. 
the  newly  emancipated  slave  will  adopt,  in  his  own  favor,  the 

very  measures  of   precaution,    which   pressed  soreliest  on 

himself  as  institutions  of  the  tyranny.      Soul's  Tr.  2  :  356. 

C.  297. 
His  slave,  his  chattel,  to  first  use,  then  destroy.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  368.     C.  558. 
Slaves.     —  God  curse  this  townf ul  of  born  slaves,  bred  slaves, 

Branded  into  the  blood  and  bone,  slaves  !   Soul's  Tr.  2 :  343. 

C.  292. 
Slavish.   The  slavish  still  aspires  to  dominate.    Red  Cott.  5  :  21. 

C.  744. 
Sleep,     in  a  sleep  as  calm  as  death.     Para.  1  :  96.     C.  38. 
had  done  far  better  In  letting  people  sleep  upon  their  woes, 

If  not  possessed  with  talent  to  relieve.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  342. 

C.  291. 


226  SLEEP  — SLUGS 

Sleep.     Tlien   something   like   a   huge  white  wave  o'  the  sea 
Broke  o'er  my  brain  and  buried  me  in  sleep.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  93.     C.  451. 

when  the  last  sleep  finds  the  eye  So  tired  it  cannot  even  shut 
itself.     Red  Cott.  5:6.     C.  738. 

dignified  And  gentry-fashioned  old-style  haunts  of  sleep ! 
Red  Cott.  5  :  46.     C.  753. 

Last  night  I  saw  you  in  my  sleep.  Bad  D.  I.  6  :  394  ;  7  :  15. 
C.  989. 

Sleep  leaves  a  door  on  hinge  Whence  soul,  ere  our  flesh  sus- 
pect, Is  off  and  away.     Bad  D.  II.  6  :  397  ;  7  :  19.     C.  990. 

Be  sure  they  sleep  not  whom  God  needs  !  Nor  fear  Their 
holding  light  his  charge,  when  every  hour  That  finds  that 
charge  delayed,  is  a  new  death.     Para.  1  :  35.     C.  15. 

Done,  another  dav  !  How  good  to  sleep  and  so  get  nearer 
death  !      R.  and  B.  3  :  264.     C.  519. 

The  innocent  sleep  soundly.     R.  and  B.  3  :  336.     C.  546. 

The  C  Major  of  this  life  :  so,  now  I  will  try  to  sleep.     Aht  V. 

4  :  185.     C.  383. 

Oh,  close,  safe,  warm  sleep  I  and  she,  —  I  and  she  !     Never 

6  :  235.     C.  928. 
Sleeps.     Sleeps  sound  because  the  clock  is  vigilant,  And  cares 

not  whether  it  be  shade  or  shine.   R.  and  B.  3  :  366.    C.  557. 
Sleeper,     as  a  sleeper  does  If  any  dear  one  call  him,  touch  his 

face  —  And   smiles   and   loves,  but  will   not   be  disturbed. 

Death  in  D.  4  :  192.     C.  386. 
Slights.     Some  slights  if  a  certain  heart  endures  Yet  it  feels. 

Old  Pict.  2:37.     C.  176. 
Slimuess.     over-burly  for  rat's  hole  Suited  to  clerical  slimness. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  77.     C.  444. 
Sloth,     sloth,  pride,  rapacity.  Humors  of  the  imposthume  inci- 
dent To  rich  blood  that  runs  thin.   R.  and  B.  3  :  77.    C.  444. 
Sloth-stifled.     Sloth-stifled  genius,  energy  disgraced  By  igno- 
rance,   high   aims   with   sorry   skill.     Geo.   B.    D.   6 :  323. 

C.  963. 
Slothful.     What  had  I  on  earth  to  do  With  the  slothful,  with 

the   mawkish,   the    unmanly  ?      Epil.  A.   6  :  440  ;   7  :  113. 

C.  1007. 
Slouch.     Who  could  help  noticing  the  husband's  slouch.  The 

black  of  his  brow.     R.  and  B.  3  :  87.     C.  448. 
Slo'w.     So  slow  to  feel  'T  is  not  a  sight  for  you  to  look  upon  ? 

Druses  2  :  125.     C.  208. 
SloTwer.     My  soul  is  slower  :  in  a  life  I  roll  The  minute  out 

whereto  you  condense  yours.     Di  a  B.  4: :  146.     C.  370. 
Slug-horn.    Dauntless  the  slug-horn  to  my  lips  I  set.    Childe  R. 

2  :  336.     C.  289. 
Slugs,     selfish  worthless  human  slugs  whose  slime  Has  failed 

to  lubricate  their  path  in  life.     R.  and  B.  3  :  108.     C.  457. 


I 


SLUGGISHNESS  —  SMILE  227 

Sluggishness.     In  the  soul  of  me  sits  sliij^jrishncss  :  Rorly  so 

strong  and  will  so  weak.     Epil.  Mihrah  (5 :  25G.     C.  D.'JO. 
Slumber.     Disappointment  finds   a  balm  Haply   in   slumber. 

Joch.  6  :  220.     C.  922. 
Slumber,  drop  Thy  films  ouce  more  and  veil  the  bliss  within  ! 

Joch.  6  :  230.     C.  926. 
Slur.     Ask  that  particular  devil  whose  task  it  is  To  trip  the 

all-but-at  perfection,  —  slur  The  line  o'  the  painter.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  438.     C.  586. 

Smack.    AVitli  smack  of  lip,  and  long-drawn  sigh  through  teeth 

Close  clenched  o'er  satisfaction.     Two  Poets  6  :  103.    C.  869. 
Small.     Say  hot  "  a  small  event  !  "     Why  "  small  "  ?     Pippa 

1  :  331.     C.  130. 
those  small  Hours  in  the  smoking-room,  wlien  instance  apt 

Rises  to  tongue's  root.     Inn  A.  5  :251.     C.  777. 
Smallest.     She  was  the  smallest  lady  alive.  Made  in  a  piece  of 

nature's  madness.     Flight  2  :  292.     C.  272. 
How  comes  it  thou  canst  discern  the  greatest  yet  choose  the 

smallest.     Sol.  and  B.  6  :  201.     C.  914. 
Smart's,    lopped  From  your  trim  bay-tree  this  unsightly  bough 

—  Smart's   who  translated  Horace  !       Chris.  Sin.    6  :  316. 

C.  960. 

Smartnesses.      Ill-timed    misplaced    attempted  smartnesses. 

A  Blot  2  :  151.     C.  219. 
Smell.     I  very  soon  had  enough  of  it.     Tlie  hot  smell  and  the 

human  noises.     Ckris.-Eve  4:4.     C.  31 7. 
Smile,     whose  soft  mouth  quivers  yet  With  the  old  smile,  but 

yet  so  changed  and  still !     Paw.  1:6.     C.  4. 
The  withered  tree-roots  and  the  cracks  of  frost,  Like  a  smile 

striving  with  a  wrinkled  face.     Para.  1: 117.     C.  46. 
that  smile.  That  hateful  smirk  of  boundless  self-conceit  Which 

seems  to  take  possession  of  the  world  And  make  of  (iod  a 

tame  confederate.  Purveyor.     Pippa  1  :  346.     C.  136. 
lit  up  with  that  appalling  smile  !     King  C.  1  :  408.     C.  161. 
Notable  wrongs   her  smile  makes  up  again  !     Liiria  2  :  395. 

C.  312. 
I  questioned  —  lifting  half  the  woman's  mask  To  let  her  smile 

loose.     R.  and  B.  3  :  202.     C.  494. 
a  smile.  At  end  of  the  forced  sternness,  means  to  mock  The 

heart-beats  here  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  407.     C.  573. 
The  smile  self-satisfied  from  ear  to  ear.     A',  and  B.  3  :  429. 

C.  582. 
How  soon  a  smile  of  God  can  change  the  world  !     In  a  B. 

4  :  144.     C.  369. 
Oh,  good  gigantic  smile  o'  the  brown  old  earth.  This  autumn 

morning  !     J.  Lee  4  :  161.     C.  375. 
What  meant   that  smile,  that  sigh  ?     Not  Solon's  self  could 

solve  !     Fifine  4  :  396.     C.  709. 


228  SMILE  — SNICKER 

Smile.    Your  smile  enswathes  me  in  beatitude.    Red  Cott.  5  :  81. 

C.  7G7. 
Burst  out  in  stars  at  brilliance  of  a  smile  !     Inn  A.  5  :287. 

C.  791. 
smile  half  smug  half  sinister,  Mock-modest  boldness  masked 

in  diffidence.     Geo.  B.  D.  ii  :  324.     C.  963. 
Smiles.     Alas,  such  smiles  are  born  Alone  of  hearts  like  yours, 

or  herdsmen's  souls  Of  ancient  time.     Para.  1:65.     C.  27. 
Well,  let  smiles  buy  me  !  have  you  more  to  spend  ?     Andrea 

4  :  87.     C.  347. 
Smiling,     departed  smiling  like  a  fiend  Who  has  deceived  God. 

Pau.  1:2.     C.  2. 
Smirk,    a  shine  lit  »ip  the  face  so  shady,  And  its  smirk  returned 

with  a  novel  meaning.     Flight  2  :299.     C.  275. 
Smoke.     Once   let  smoke  rise  untroubled,  we  descry  Clearlier 

what   tongues  of   flame    may  spire  and  spit.      R.  and  B. 

3  :  22.     C.  423. 
You  ought  to  consume  your  own  smoke,  sir  !     Pacch.  5  :  329. 

C. 806. 
Smooth.     A  rnan  to  smooth  such  natures  as  parade  Of  opposi- 
tion must  exasperate.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  339.     C.  290. 
Here  's  fruit  of  your  smooth  speeches  and  soft  looks  !     SouVs 

Tr.  2  :  344.     C.  292. 
slipt  as  smooth  As  the  Pope's  pantoufle  does  on  the  Pope's 

foot.     R.  and  B.  3  :  116.     C.  460. 
Snake.     A  lithe  snake  thrids  the  hedge,  makes  throb  no  leaf  : 

A  heavy  ox  sets  chest  to  brier.     R.  and  B.  3  :411.     C.  575. 
Since  egg  turned  snake  needs  fear  no  serpentry.     R.  and  B. 

3  :470.     C.  599. 
as  when  his  hue  Betrays  him  and  the  burrowing  snake  gleams 

through.     Numph.  5  :  350.     C.  813. 
Snakes.      Crushed   eggs  whence  snakes  could  crawl  !      Epil. 

Camel-D.  6  :  260.     C.  937. 
Snare.    She  never  dreams  they  used  her  for  a  snare.   R.  and  B. 

3:205.     C.  496. 
Sneaks,     my  Tragic  masters  ?     Sneaks  Whose  art  is  mere  de- 
sertion of  a  trust !     Ari.  A.  b  :  153.     C.  649. 
Sneaking'st.     The  sneaking'st  crew,  in  short,  I  e'er  despised  ! 

Colomhe  2  :  204.     C.  240. 
Sneer.     Only  they  sneer,  make   light  of  —  one  may  say.  Nib- 
ble at  what  you  do.     Straf.  1  :  137.     C.  53. 
On  what  pretence  Are  you  and  I  to  sneer  at  who  lent  help 

to  hand,  And  gave  the  lucky  lift  ?    Fijine  4  :  412.     C.  718. 
Sneers.     If  vou  knew  how  a  devil  sneers  within  me.      Para. 

1  :  98.     C.  39. 
Sneering.    White  sneering  old  reproachful  face.    Pippa  1  :  334. 

C.  131. 
Snicker.    —  the  cold  cruel  snicker  close  behind  —     R.  and  B. 

3  :  265.     C.  520. 


i 


SNICKERING  — SOLEMN  229 

Snickering,    snickering,  crook'd  his  wicked  thumb.    Her.  Trag. 

2  :  315.     C.  281. 

Snow.     The  woods  were  long  austere  with  snow.     Sor.  1 :  216. 

C.  83. 
When  the  mesnierizer  Snow  With  his  hand's  first  sweep  Put 

the  earth  to  sleep.     Lovers'  Q.  2  :  29.     C.  173. 
Superfluous  sifting  snow,  nor  helps  nor  harms.      R.  and  B. 

3  :  346.     C.  550. 

The  snow  lies  glib  as  glass  and  hard  as  steel,  and  soon  .   .  . 

a  marvel  of  a  moon.     Ivan  6  :  133.     C.  882. 
And  see,  a  rose-light  dyes  The  endmost  snow.     Ivan  6  :  136. 

C.  883. 
Sno'w^-flake.     Ever  and  anon  there  flittered  through   the  air 

A  snow-flake.     R.  and  B.  3  :  14.     C.  420. 
Soar,     though  I  cannot  soar,  I  do  not  crawl.     There  are  worse 

portions  than  this  one  of  mine.     Para.  1  :  79.     C.  32. 
Social.     What  the  superior  social  section  thinks.  In  person  of 

some  man  of  quality.     R.  and  B.  3  :  21.     C.  423. 
Your  social  fabric,  pinnacle  to  base,  Comes   down   a-clatter 

like  a  house  of  cards.     R.  and  B.  3  :  152.     C.  475. 
Sociality,     the  old  sociality  Abjured  forever.     Inn  A.  o  :21b. 

C.  786. 
Society,     why,  society  goes  to  ground.  Its  rules  are  idiot's- 

rambling.     R.  and  B.  3  :  152.     C.  475. 
sapped  society  shall  crash,  Whereof  the  main  prop  was,  is, 

and  shall  be —  Supremacy  of  husband.     R.  and  B.  3  :401. 

C.  571. 
Soften.     For  your  own  sake,  not  mine,  soften  you  too  !     Hal. 

and  Hoi  6  :  130.     C.  880. 
Softly,     commonplace  category  Of  men  bound  to  go  softly  all 

their  days.  Obeying  law.     R.  and  B.  3  :  301.     C.  533. 
Soil.     At   least   I   soil    no   page   with   bread   and    milk,    Nor 

crumple,  dogs-ear  and  deface  —  boys'  way.     Dev.  6  :  431  ; 

7 : 94.     C.  1003. 
Solace.     'T  is  solace  making  baubles,  ay,  and  sport.     Caliban 

4 : 210.     C.  393. 
Soldier.     I  turned  alike  from  the  hillside   zigzag  thread  Of 

wav  to  the  table-land  a  soldier  takes.     R.  and  B.  3  :  148. 

C.  473. 
Soldier-saints.     The   soldier-saints    who,  row   on   row.  Burn 

upward  each  to  his  point  of   bliss.     Stat,    and    B.   2  :  328. 

C.  286. 
Soldier's.     Think  first,   fight   afterwards  —  the   soldier's   art. 

Childe  R.  2  :  333.     C.  287. 
Soldiership,     the  use  of  soldiership,  Self-abnegation,  freedom 

from  all  fear,  Loyalty  to  the  life's  end  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  383. 

C.  564. 
Solemn.     And   struck   the   simple,   solemn.     Ben   K.   6 :  386. 

C.  372. 


230 


SOLID  —  SONNETS 


Solid.     The  solid,  not  the  fragile,  Tempts  rain  and  hail  and 

thunder.     St.  Mart.  5  :  353.     C.  814. 
Solidor.      'Neath   rampired   Solidor   pleasant   riding   on    the 

Ranee  !     Herve  5  :  357.     C.  816. 
Solitude.     She  peopled  solitude  sufficiently.     Red  Cott.  5  :  19. 

C.  743. 
There   never    was   a   thorough    solitude.      Red    Cott.   5 :  25. 

C.  745. 
disembodied  soul  anticipates  .  .  .  Above  all  crowding,  crys- 
tal silentness,  Above  all  noise,  a  silver  solitude.     Ari.  A. 

5  :  100.     C.  628. 
That   solitude  —  two   make    so   populous  !  —  For   food    finds 

memories  of  the  past  suffice.     Ari.  A.  5:  240.     C.  681. 
Solomon.     King  Solomon  confirmed  Apostle  Paul :  That  nice 

decision  of  Dolabella,  eh  ?     R.  and  B.3:6.     C.  416. 
Solomon  King  of  the  Jews  and  the  Queen  of  Sheba,  Balkis. 

Sol.  and  B.  6  :  200.     C.  913. 
Solon.     How  legislated,  .  .  .  Solon  and  his  Athenians  ?    Quote 

the  code  Of  Romulus  and  Rome  !    R.  and  £.3:6.     C.  416. 
Sombre.     The  stealing  sombre  element  comes  in  Till  all  is 

black  or  blood-red  in  the  piece.     R.  and  B.  3  :  47.     C.  432. 
Son.     Each  uncle's  cousin's  brother's  son  of  him.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  46.     C.  432. 

Our    modest   well-conducted    pious   son.      Red    Cott.    5 :  51. 
C.  755. 
Song.     As  peace  returned,  I  sought  out  some  pursuit  ;   And 
song  rose.     Pau.  1:9.     C.  5. 
one  soft  web  of  song.     Sor.  1:287.     C.  111. 
A   sweep  of  lute-strings,  laughs,   and  whifts  of  song.     Fra 

Lippo  4  :  75.     C.  342. 
such  song  so  knit  the  nerve  That  work  grew  play  and  van- 
ished.    Forgiv.  5 -.^b^.     C.  817. 
Look,  how  the  laborer's  song  Cheers  him  !     Forgiv.  5  :  359. 

C.  817. 
Touch  him  ne'er  so  lightly,  into  song  he  broke.     Touch  6  :  191. 

C.  910. 
A  Song  where  flute-breath  silvers  trumpet-clang.     Chris.  Sin. 
6:314.     C.  959. 
Song-bird.     Never  spoke  A  boy  so  like  a  song-bird.     Druses 

2  :  99.     C.  198. 
Songs.     Songs  may  inspirit  us, — not  from  his  lyre.     Lost  L. 
2  :  3.     C.  164. 
Songs,  Spring  thought  perfection.  Summer  criticises.     Flute- 
M.  6  :  423  ;  7  :  78.     C.  1000. 
Sonnet-sing.     Shall  I  sonnet-sing  you  about  myself  ?     House 

5  :  336.     C.  808. 
Sonnets.     Rafael    made   a   century   of   sonnets.       One    Word 

4  :  124.     C.  362. 


SOOTHE  — SOUL  231 

Soothe.     'T  is  a  sore  to  soothe  not  chafe.     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  297. 

C.  953. 
Sophistry,     he  could  stuff  four  ragbags   sausage-wise   With 

sophistry,  with  bookish   odds  aud   euds.     Ari.  A.   5:122. 

C.  637. 
Sophokles.     Ouce  and  only  once,  trod  stage,  Sang  and  touched 

lyre  .  .  .  Our  Sophokles.     ^n.  ^.5:228.     C.  676. 
Bordello.     Sordello,  compassed  murkily  about  With  ravage  of 

six  long  sad  hundred  years.     Sor.  1  :  193.     C.  75. 
Sordello's.     Who  will  may  hear  Sordello's  story  told.      Sor. 

1  :  207.     C.  80. 

Who   would   has   heard   Sordello's   story   told.      Sor.  1 :  326. 
C.  127. 
SorroTV.     Sorrow  is  hard  to  bear,  and  doubt  is  slow  to  clear. 
Aht  V.  4  :  185.     C.  383. 

Choose  a  joy  !     Bettered  it  was  by  sorrow  gone  before.    Bean- 
St.  6  :  272.     C.  942. 
Sorry.     Think,  aud  be  sorry  you  did  this  thing  !     Worst  4  :  170. 

C.  378. 
Soul.     I   cannot  chain   my  soul  :  it  will  not  rest  In  its  clay 
prison,  this  most  narrow  sphere.     Pan.  1  :  15.     C.  7. 

I  go  to  prove  my  soul  !  I  see  my  way  as  birds  their  track- 
less way.     I  shall  arrive  !     Para.  1  :  40.     C.  17. 

See  this  soul  of  ours  !  How  it  strives  weakly  in  the  child,  is 
loosed  In  manhood,  clogged  by  sickness,  back  compelled 
By  age  and  waste,  set  free  at  last  by  death  :  Why  is  it, 
flesh  enthralls  it  or  enthrones  ?     Para.  1:44.     C.  19. 

How  can  I  change  this  soul  ?  —  this  apparatus.  Para.  1 :  76. 
C.  31. 

soul,  which  naught  Avails  to  awe  save  these  delusions  bred 
From  its  own  strength.     Para.  1:  79.     C.  32. 

a  soul  fit  to  receive  Delight  at  every  sense.    Sor.  1 :  203.    C.  79. 

my  soul  o'ertops  Each  height,  then  every  depth  profoundlier 
drops  ?     Sor.  1  :  315.     C.  123. 

Tripped  to  the  church  by  morning-light  To  save  his  soul  in 
his  despite.     The  Confess.  2:11.     C.  169. 

the  sold  .  .  .  the  true  end  ...  It  stops  here  for  is  .  .  . 
With  some  other  soul  to  mingle.     Crist.  2  :  19.     C.  170. 

Ages  past  the  soul  existed.  Here  an  age  't  is  resting  merely. 
And  hence  fleets  again  for  ages.     Crist.  2  :  19.     C.  170. 

The  soul,  doubtless,  is  immortal  —  where  a  soul  can  be  dis- 
cerned.    Toccata  2  :  36.     C.  175. 

When  a  soul  declares  itself  —  to  wit.  By  its  fruit,  the  thing  it 
does!     By  Fire.  2 -.m.     C.  187. 

But  the  soul  Whence  the  love  comes,  all  ravage  leaves  that 
whole.    Any  Wife  2  :  67.     C.  187. 

Vainly  the  flesh  fades  ;  soul  makes  all  things  new.     Any  Wife 

2  :  67.     C.  187. 


232 


SOUL 


Soul,     the  soul  in  its  body  sunk  Like  a  blade  sent  bome  to  its 

scabbard.     Flight  2 -.305.     C.  277. 
Can  the  soul,  the  will,  die  out  of  a  man  Ere  liis  body  find  the 

grave  that  gapes  ?     Slat,  and  B.  2  :  327.     C.  28.5. 
Whose  slight  free  loose  and  incapacious  soul  Gave  bis  tongue 

scope  to  say  whate'er  he  would.    Soul's  Tr.  2  :  341.    C.  291. 
I  fused  niv  live  soul  and  that  inert  stuff,  Before  attempting 

smithcraft.     R.  and  B.  3  :  11.     C.  419. 
How  of  a  certain  soid  bound  up,  may  be,  I'  the  barter  with 

the  body  and  money-bags  ?     li.  and  B.  3  :  155.     C.  476. 
The  proper  wink  at  the  hot-headed  youth  Who  lets  his  soul 

show,    through    transparent    words.     R.    and    B.   3 :  192. 

C.  490. 
The  snow-white   soul   that   angels   fear  to  take  Untenderly. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  193.     C.  491. 
such  an  end  Of  such  a  wonderful  white  soul.    R.  and  B.  3  :  193. 

C.  491. 
Into  what  abysm  the  soul  may  slip,  Leave  aspiration  here, 

achievement  there.     R.  and  B.  3  :  200.     C.  494. 
Mv  soul  is   mine,  my  body  is  my  soul's.     R.  and  B.  3 :  218. 

C.  501. 
nor  cared  my  desecrated  soul    Should  have  fair  walls,  gay 

windows  for  the  world.     R.  and  B.  3  :  256.     C.  516. 
Your  soul  behind  them  is  the  pure  strong  wind,  Not  dust  and 

feathers  which   its  breath   may  bear.     R.  and  B.  3  :  269. 

C.  521. 
a  soul,  in  passage  to  the  sky,  Left  nakeder  than  when  flesh- 
robe  was  new.     R.  and  B.  3  :  365.     C.  557. 

—  blame  yourselves  For  this  eruption  of  the  pent-up  soul  You 
prisoned  first.     R.  and  B.  3  :  436.     C.  586. 

I  have  gone  inside  my  soul  And  shut  its  door  behind  me. 
R.  and  B.  3  :  454.     C.  593. 

—  A  soul  made  weak  by  its  pathetic  want  Of  just  the  first  ap- 
prenticeship to  sin.     R.  and  B.  3  :  470.     C.  598. 

It  lives,  If  precious  be  the  soid  of  man  to  man.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  476.     C.  601. 

Ob,  let  me  strive  to  make  the  most  Of  the  poor  stinted  soul. 

Eas-Day  4  :  52.     C.  334. 
That  puff  of  vapor  from  his  mouth,  man's  soul,     Karshisk 

4  :  64.     C.  338. 

Man's  soul,  and  it 's  a  fire,  smoke  ...  no  It 's  not  ...  It 's  va- 
por done  up  like  a  new-born  babe.    Fra  Lippo  4  :  78.    C.  344. 

Paint  the  soul,  never  mind  the  legs  and  arms  !  Fra  Lippo 
4  :  78.     C.  344. 

in  that  thin  frame  Pain-twisted,  punctured  through  and 
through  with  cares.  There  lived  a  lavish  soul  until  it 
starved.  Debarred  of  healthy  food.  In  a  B.  4::  137, 
C.  366. 


SOUL  233 

Soul.     Look  to  the  soul  —  Pity  that,  stoop  to  that.     In  a  B. 

4  :  137.     C.  3(36. 
How  the  soul  leains  diversely  from  the  flesh  !     Death  in  D. 

4  :  197.     C.  388. 
Beneath  the  veriest  ash,  there  hides  a  spark  of  soul  Which, 

quickened  by  love's   breath,  may  yet  pervade  the  whole. 

Fifine  4  :  401.     C.  712. 
in  the  seeing  soul,  all  worth  lies,  I  assert,  —  And  naught  i' 

the  world,  which,  save  for  soul  tliat  sees,  inert  Was,  is,  and 

would  be  ever.     Fifine  4  :  405.     C.  714. 
No  matter  whence  flame  sprung  So  long  as  soul  has  power  to 

make  .  .  .  burn.     F</!ne  4  :  405.     C.  714. 
Since  only  soul  affords  the  soul  fit  pabulum.     Fifine  4 :  407. 

C.  715. 
we  put  forth  hand  and  pluck  At  what  seems   somehow  like 

reality  —  a  soul.     Fifine^ -All.     C.  718. 
since  one  soul  has  disengaged  Mine  from  the  shows  of  things, 

so  much  is  fact.     Fifine  4  :  418.     C.  721. 
The  individual  soul  works  through  the  shows  of  sense  .  .  . 

LTp   to   au  outer   soul   as    individual    too.      Fifine   4 :  439. 

C.  733. 
hints  which  make  the  soul  discernible  by  soul  —  Let  only  soul 

look   up,   not   down,    not    h^te    but    love.     Fifine  4:  439. 

C.  733. 
Soul  with    its  proper   itch    of    instinct,   prompting   clear    To 

recognize    soul's    self    soul's   only  master.     Fifine  4 :  441. 

C.  734. 
Nothing  is  prominently  likable  To  vulgar  eye  without  a  soul 

behind.     Red  Cott.  5:2.     C.  737. 
Why  should  your  soul's  reflection  rule  your  soul  ?     Red  Cott. 

5:21.     C.744. 
't  is  the  nature  of  the  soiU  To  seek  a  show  of  durability.  Nor, 

changing,  plainly  be  the  slave  of  change.     Red  Cott.  5  :  32. 

C.  748. 
took  his  soul  In  both  his  hands,  as  it  were  a  vase.     Red  Cott. 

5:41.     C.  752. 
antiquated  faith  .  .  .  Explained  that  body  is  not  soul,  but  just 

Soul's  servant.     Red  Cott.  5  :  61.     C.  759. 
Surely,  where  thought  so  bears  soul,  soul  in  time  May  per- 
manently bide.     Ari.  A.  5  :  100.     C.  628. 
drugged,  drowsed  And  damnified  my  soul  and  body  both  ! 

InnA.b:21&.     C.  786. 
Fretless  and  free.  Soul,  clap  thv  pinion  !     Earth  have  domin- 
ion, Body,  o'er  thee  !     Prol.  La  S.  6  :  53.     C.  849. 
Soul  that  canst  soar  !    Body  may  slumber  :  Body  shall  cumber 

Soul-flight  no  more.     Prol.  La  S.  6  :  53.     C.  849. 
Well  ?     Why,  he  at  least  believed  in  Soul,  was  very  sure  of 

God  !     LaS.Q:  75.     C.  858. 


234 


SOUL  — SPACE 


Soul.  Thos(;  incoiximensurably  marvellous  Contrivances  which 
furnish  forth  the  house  Where  soul  has  sway  !  Fr.  Fu. 
6  :  340.  C.  9G9. 
soul  must  needs  know  whence  there  springs  —  IIow,  when  and 
why  —  what  sense  but  loves,  nor  lists  To  know  at  all.  Ger. 
rfeZ.  G:346.  C.  971. 
"  Soul  "  —  accept  A  word  which  vaguely  names  what  no  adept 

In  word-use  fits  and  fixes.     Chas.  A.Q:  357.     C.  976. 
An    element    which    works  beyond    our  guess,  Soul,  the    un- 
sounded sea.     Chas.  A.  6  :357.     C.  97G. 
Who  tells  of,  tracks  to  source  the  founts  of  Soul?     Chas.  A. 

6  :  358.     C.  976. 
"Certain,  a  soul  have  / —  We  may  have  none,"  he  sneered. 

Ben  K.  6  :  386.     C.  372. 
Soul,   the    immortal    twin  Of   body  which   bore   soul's  yoke 
Since  mortal  and  not  akin.     Rev.  6  :  435  ;  7  :  104.     C.  1005. 
Soul-sides.     God    be    thanked,  the   meanest  of   his  creatures 
Boasts  two  soul-sides,  one  to  face  the  world  with,  One  to 
show  a  woman   when  he   loves  her  !       0«e    Word  4  :  128. 
C.  363. 
Soul's.     Believe   a  woman   still  may   take   a   man  .  .  .  And, 
for  the  soul's   sake,  understand  the  fault  Of  armor  frayed 
by  fighting.     R.  and  B.  3  :  156.     C.  476. 
I  take  upon  my  lips  Phrase  the  solemn  Tuscan  fashioned,  and 
declare  the  soul's  eclipse  Not  the    soul's   extinction  ?     La 
5.  6  :  61.      C.  852. 
Souls.     Souls  alter  not,   and  mine   must  still  advance.     Pan. 
1  :  15.     C.  7. 
Souls  alter  not,  and  mine  must  progress  still.     Pan.  1  :  14.* 
Doubt  you  whether  This  she  felt  as,  looking  at  me.  Mine  and 

her  souls  rushed  together?     Crist.  2  :  19.     C.  170. 
souls  shall  rise  in  their  degree  ;  Butterflies  may  dread  extinc- 
tion, —  you  '11  not  die,  it  cannot  be  !     Toccata  2  :  36.    C.  175. 
't  was  something  our  two  souls  Should  mix  as  mists  do.     By 

Fire.  2  :  63.     C.  186. 
'T  is  an  awkward  thing  to  play  with  souls.  And  matter  enough 

to  save  one's  own.     A  Light  W.  2  :  278.     C.  267. 
"  Souls  washed  white  But  red  once,  stUl  show  pinkish  to  the 
eye  !  "     R.  and  B.  3  :  353.     C.  553. 
Sour.     What  but  sour  Suspected  makes  the  sweetness  doubly 

sweet.     Lin  A.  5  :  279.     C.  787. 
Source.     Back  goes  creation  to  its  source,  source  prime  And 
ultimate,  the  single  and  the  sole.     Bean-St.  6  :  278.    C.  945. 
Southern.     No    pure    and    simple  resin  from  the  North,  But 
composite   with   virtues  that  belong  To   Southern  culture  ! 
Ttco  Poets  6  :  92.     C.  865. 
Space,     'twixt  one  and  none  there  lies  The  space  'twixt  heaven 
au'd  hell.     Ivan  6  :  130.     C.  883. 


SPARK  —  SPEEC  H  235 

Spark.     Some  gay  dare-devil  cloak-and-rapier  spark  Capable 

of  adventure.     R.  and  Ti.  3  :  49.     C.  433. 
Sou  O'  the  coal,  —  as  Job  and  Hebrew  name  a  spark.     Two 

Poets  G  :  78.     C.  859. 
Sparks.     And  sparks  from  heaven  transpierce  earth's  coarsest 

covertures.     Fijine  4  :  393.     C.  707. 
Spasm.    Had  Spasm  more  attributes  Than  power  and  knowledge 

in  its  gift,  before  Man  came  to  pass  ?    Fr.  Fu.  G  :  335.  C.  9G7. 
Speak.     Oh,  speak  that  thought  Which  makes  your  brow  and 

cheeks  so  pale  !     A  Blot  2  :  175.     C.  229. 
Do  let   me  speak  for  her  you  blame  so  much  !     R.  and  B. 

3:244.     C.  511. 
Let  me  speak  this  once  in  my  true  person.     One  Word  4  :  127. 

C.  363. 
you  cannot  speak  From  the  churchyard  neither,  miles  removed. 

Too  Late  4  :  178.     C.  381. 
I  must  speak  out  at  the  end.  Though  I  find  the  speaking  hard. 

Herveb-.^bl.     C.  81G. 
Speak  !     Long   parley   may   last   too   long.     Muleij.    6  :  164. 

C.  897. 
Species,     white  Amid  the  general  brown  o'  the  species,  lurks 

A  burgess  nearly  an  aristocrat.     R.  and  B.  3  :  113.    C.  459. 
Specious.      Specious  enough,   the  devil's  argument  Lost  no- 
thing on  his  lips.     Straf.  1  :  132.     C.  51. 
Speech,     our   hearts   so   beat   together   That   speech   seemed 

mockery.     P««.  1:21.     CIO. 
our  hearts  so  beat  together  That  speech  is  mockery.     Pau. 

1:21.* 
Was  it  love  or  praise  ?     Speech   half-asleep   or   song   half- 
awake !     Flower's  2:9.     C.  166. 
This  poor  version  Of   the  speech   I  spoil,  as  it  were,   with 

stammering.     Flight  2  :  305.     C.  277. 
he  speaks  rapidly,  angrilj^,  speech  that  smites  :  And  they  keep 

silence,  bear  blow  after  blow.     R.  and  B.  3  :  25.     C.  424. 
The  absolute  glory  in  some   full-grown  speech.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  27.     C.  425. 
The  straight  backbone- thought  of  the  crooked  speech.    R.  and 

B.  3  :  117.     C.  460. 

Landed  and  stranded  lies  my  very  speech  My  miracle,  my 
monster  of  defence.     R.  and  B.  3  :  317.     C.  5.19. 

Therefore  these  filthy  rags  of  speech,  this  coil  Of  statement, 
comment,  query  and  response.     A',  and  B.  3  :  364.     C.  557. 

To  Thee,  .  .  .  Who  head  and  heart  alike  discernest.  Looking 
below  light  speech  we  utter.     Chris.-Eve  4  :  31.     C.  327. 

Letting  the  rank  tongue  blossom  into  speech.     Caliban  4  :  207. 

C.  392. 

Since  plain  speech  salves  the  wound  it  seems  to  make.  Red 
Cott.  5  :  85.     C.  769. 


23G  SPEECH  — SPOKE 

Speech.     Impalpability   reduced   to   speech.     /?ec?  Cott.  5  :  97. 
C.  773. 
speech  so   amplified    That    words  find   blood-warmth  which, 

cold- writ,  they  lo.se  ?     Ari.  A.o:  104.     C.  630. 
Speech  follows  slowlier,  but  at  last.     Inn  A.  5  :276.     C.  786. 
speech  heard  far  and  near  At  one  and  the  same  magic  mo- 
ment !     Fmt  6  :  370.     C.  981. 
Speeches,     weighing  out  with  nonchalance  Fine  speeches  like 
gold  from  a  balance.     Gloce  2  :  249.     C.  257. 
tried  in  a  crucible,  To  what  "speeches  like  gold"  were  re- 
ducible.    Glove  2  :  249.     C.  257. 
Sphere.     Hoav  should  this  earth's  life  prove  my  only  sphere  ? 
Can  I  so  narrow  sense  but  that  in  life  Soul  still  exceeds  it  ? 
Pan.  1  :  16.     C.  8. 
And  thus  I  know  this  earth  is  not  my  sphere.  For  I  cannot  so 

narrow  me  but  that  I  still  exceed  it.     Pau.  1  :  16.* 
A  sphere  is  but  a  sphere  ;  Small,  Great,  are  merely  terms  we 
bandy  here.     5or.  1:318.     C.  124. 
Spider.     A  spider  had  spun  his  web  across.  And  sat  in  the  midst 
with  arms  akimbo.     Sib.  Schaf.  2:11.     C.  167. 
Perceived  a  spider  drop  into  his  wine,  Let  fall  the  flagon,  died 
of  simple  fear.     Shah  A.G:  243.     C.  931. 
Spilth.     Lick  spilth  that  has  trickled  from  classic  jowls.     Epil. 

Pacch.  5:392.     C.  828. 
Spirit,     from  rank  to  rank,  Jike  wind  His  spirit  passed  to  win- 
now and  divide.     Sor.  1:  212.     C.  82. 
Leave  the  flesh  to  the  fate  it  was  fit  for !  the  spirit  be  thine  ! 

Saul  2  :  53.     C.  182. 
mv  spirit  yearns  to  purge  Her  stains  off  in  the  fierce  renew- 
ing fire.     A  Blot  2  :  163.     C.  224. 
How  inexhaustibly  the  spirit  grows  !     Luria  2  :401.     C.  314. 
Hold  on,  hope  hard  in  the  subtle  thing  That  's  spirit.     Prol. 
Pacch.  5  :  318.     C.  802. 
Spirit's,     the  baser  stuff  Was  but  the  nobler  spirit's  vehicle. 

^n.  ^.5:176.     C.  6.59. 
Spite.     —  the  great  dame  shows  spite  Should  drive  a  cat  mad. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  199.     C.  493. 
Spiteful.     So  petty  yet  so  spiteful.     Childe  R.  2  :  333.    C.  288. 
Spitefullest.     she  '11  still  face  down  The  spitef ullest  of  talkers 

in  our  town.     Pippa  1 :  330.     C.  130. 
Spittle.     Creation  purged  o'  the  miscreate,  man  redeemed,  A 
spittle  wiped  oft"  from  the  face  of  God  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  222. 
C.  503. 
Splinters.    Feel,  where  mv  life  broke  off  from  thine,  How  fresh 

the  splinters  keep  aud"^  fine.      In  Three  D.  2  :  81.  C.  192. 
Spoke.     Spoke   as   he    dared,   set   stammeringly    forth   With 
white  lips  and  dry  tongue,  —  as  but  a  youth.     R.  and  B. 
3 :  357.     C.  554. 


SPONGE  — STAGE  237 

Sponge,     earth,  distent  with  moisture  like  a  sponge.     Ger.  de 

Z.  6:348.     C.  972. 
Spontaneous.     Spontaneous  generation,  need  I   prove  Were 

facile  feat   to   Nature   at   a   pinch  ?      R.  and   B.  3  :  3o0. 

C.  552. 
Sport.     He  understood  the  worth  of  womankind,  —  To  furnish 

man  —  provisionally — sport.     Red  Colt.  5 -.32.     C.  748. 
Spring,      spring   Gladdens  and  the  young  earth  is  beautiful. 

Pau.  1:5.     C.  4. 
when  spring  comes  With  sunshine  back  again   like  an   old 

smile.     Pau.  1:24:.     C.  11. 
Spring  shall  plant,  And  Autumn  garner  to  the  end  of  time. 

Soul's  Tr.  2  :  343.     C.  291. 
This  one  heart  gave  me  all  the  Spring!     R.  and  B.  3:271. 

C.  522. 
One  warm  Spring  eve  in  Rome,  and  imaware  Looking,  may- 
hap, to   count    what  stars  were   out.      R.  and   B.  3:408. 

C.  574. 
That  miracle  the  Greek  Bard   sadly  greets  :   Spring  for  the 

tree  and   herb  —  no   Spring  for   us  !      Ger.  de  L.  6  :  353. 

C.  974. 
Spring-time.      Spring-time,    that's    the    ring-time.      Inn   A. 

5  :  310.     C.  800. 
Spring-wind,      spring-wind,  like  a  dancing  psaltress,  passes. 

Para.  1  :  117.     C.  46. 
Spring's,     when  Spring's  green  girlishness  Grew  nubile,  and 

she  trembled  into  May.     Red  Cott.  5  :  66.     C.  761. 
Spurn,     meet   halfway  what  most  you   hope    to  spurn  I'   the 

sequel.     Fifine  4::\:lo.     C.  719. 
Did  the  conqueror  spurn  the  creature.  Once  its  service  done  ? 

That 's   no   such   imcommon   feature.     Two   Poets   6  :  114. 

C.  873. 
Spy.     We  had  among  us,  not  so  much  a  spy,  As  a  recording 

chief-inquisitor.     How  it  S.  4  :59.     C.  336. 
Squander,     those  who  squander  every  energy  Convertible  to 

good,  on  painted  toys.     Para.  1  :45.     C.  19. 
Squeamish.      Use   makes   me   not   so   squeamish.      King   C. 

1  :  395.     C.  156. 
The  world  's  too  squeamish  now  to  bear   plain  words  Con- 
cerning deeds  it  acts  with  gust  enough.      Ari.  A.  5  :  108. 

C.  632. 
Squint,     wishful  one   could  lend   that  crowd  one's  eyes,   (So 

universal  is  its  plague  of  squint).    R.  and  B.  3  :  20.    C.  422. 
Stabbing.      hacked   to   pieces,  —  never,   the    expert   say,    So 

thorough  a  study  of  stabbing.     R.  and  B.  3  :  V)0.     C.  440. 
Stag.     'T  was  a  gold-red  stag  that  stood  and  stared.  Gigantic 

and  magnific.     Don.  6  :  197.     C.  912. 
Stage,     thanks  to  wine-lees  and   democracy,  We  've  still  our 


\ 


238  STAGNATION  — STAR 

stage    where    truth  calls  spade  a  spade  !     A  ri.  ^4.5: 108. 

C.  G32. 
Stagnation.     The   dull   stagnation   of  a   soul,   content,   Once 

foiled,   to  leave  betimes  a  thriveless  quest.     Para.   1 :  33. 

C.  14. 
Stain.     Something  of   stain  will   ever  rest  on  you.     King  C. 

1:410.     C.  161. 
Only,  why  should  it  be  with  stain  at  all  ?     Any  Wife  2  :  70. 

C.  188. 
Standard.     I  changed  for  you  the  very  laws  of  life  :    Made 

you   the  standard  of   all   right,  all   fair.      Inn   .4.5:287. 

C.  790. 
Standing-place,     you  touch  Just  here  my  solid  standing-place 

amid  The  wash  and  welter.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  339.     C.  9G9. 
Stanza.     Each   stanza   seems   to   gather   skirts   around.    And 

primly,  trimly,  keep  the   foot's   confine.     Inn   A.  5:243. 

C.  773. 
Star.     Scarce  deeming  thou  wast  as  a  star  to  men  !     Pau.  1  : 6. 

C.  4. 
As  I   look  back,  I  see  that  I  have  halted  Or  hastened  as  I 

looked  towards  that  star.     Pau.  1:8.     C.  5. 
As  I  look  back,  I  see  that  I  have  wasted  Or  progressed  as  I 

looked  towards  that  star.     Pau.  1  :8.* 
sapphirine  spirit  of  a  twilight  star.     Para.  1  :  55.     C.  23. 
As  in  the  angry  and  tumultuous  West  A  soft  star  trembles 

through  the  drifting  clouds.     Para.  1: 106.     C.  42. 
To  bi'east  the  bloody  sea  That  sweeps  before  me  :  with  one 

star  for  guide.     Straf.  1  :  156.     C.  60. 
Night   has  its   first,  supreme,  forsaken   star.      Straf.  1  :  156. 

C.  60. 
light-hearted  as  a  plunging  star.     Sor.  1:197.     C.  76. 
All  that  I  know  Of  a  certain  star.     Star  2  :  58.     C.  185. 
if  their  star  is  a  world  ?     Mine  has  opened  its  soul  to  me  : 

therefore  I  love  it.     5tor2:59.     C.  185. 
when  afar  You  rise,  remember  one  man  saw  you.  Knew  you, 

and  named  a  star  !     Popul.  2  :  90.     C.  195. 
My  star,  God's  glow-worm  !     Popul.  2  :  90.     C.  195. 
Oh,  never  star  Was  lost  here  but  it  rose  afar  !    Waring  2  :  275. 

C.  266. 
Tlie  calm  instructed  eye  of  man  holds  fast  By  the  sole  bearing 

of  the  visible  star.     Lima  2  :  377.     C.  305. 
the  star  supposed,  but  fog  o'  the  fen.  Gilded  star-fashion  by  a 

glint  from  hell.     R.  and  B.  3  :13.     C.  419. 
Blazed  as  when  star  and  star  must  needs  go  close  Till  each 

hurts  each  and  there  is  loss  in  heaven.     R.  and  B.  3  :  91. 

C.  450. 
What 's  a  star  ?     A  world,  or  a  world's  sun  :  does  n't  it  serve 

As  taper  also,  timepiece.     Sludge  4  :  243.     C.  406. 


STAR  —  STATESMANSHIP  239 

Star.     Calamitous,  just  zigzags  some  shot  star,  Poor  promise  of 

faint  joy.     Ari.  A.  5  :  154.     C.  050. 
lest  Glowworm  I  prove  thee,  Star  that  now  sparkiest !   Piagah 

//.  5:343.     C.  811. 
Sky  —  what  a  scowl  of  cloud  Till,  near  and  far,  Ray  on  ray 

split  the   shroud :    Splendid,   a  star  !      T'wo  Poets  6 :  77. 

C.  859. 
Stars,     stars  steal  out  one  by  one  As  hunted  men  steal  to  their 

mountain  watch.     Pau.  1:7.     C.  4. 
What  first  were  guessed  as  points,  I  now  knew  stars.     Death 

in  D.  4  :  195.     C.  387. 
the  stars  One  by  one  came  lamping —  chiefly  that  prepotency 

of  Mars.     La  S.  6  :  56.     C.  850. 
Stare.     At  stare  like  one  expanded  peacock-tail.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  424.     C.  580. 
Starting-place.     Is  this  our  ultimate  stage,  or  starting-place 

To  try  man's  foot,  if  it  will  creep  or  climb —     R.  and  B. 

3:365.     C.  557. 
Starting-point,     why  obtain  the  dust  Of  the  end  precisely  at 

the  starting-point  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  427.     C.  582. 
Starvation.      Husks   keep    flesh    from    starvation,   anyhow. 

Red  Cott.  5  :  77.     C.  765. 
Starves,     when  a   boy  starves  in  the  streets  .  .  .  Why,  soul 

and   sense   of   him   grow   sharp   alike.      Fra  Lippo  4  :  76. 

C.  343. 
Starved.     I   think  I  never  saw  Such  starved  ignoble  nature. 

ChildeR.  2 -.332.     C.  287. 
Starveling.     Mailed  like  a  man-at-arms,  though  all  the  while 

A  puny  starveling.     R.  and  B.  3  :  367.     C.  558. 
with  a  scantling  of  his  store,  made  big  Thy  starveling  nature. 

Jock.  6  :  221.     C.  922. 
State,     sad  obscure  sequestered  state  Where  God  unmakes  but 

to  remake  the  soul  He  else  made  first  in  vain.     R.  and  B. 

3:403.     C.  572. 
State's,    the  State's  Disinterested  slaves,  nay  —  please  the  Fates 

—  Saviors  and  nothing  less.      Geo.  B.'  D.  6  :321.     C.  962. 
Statesman,     never   did  the  Kaiser    Boast  as  subject  such  a 

statesman,   friend,    and   something   more  !     Pietro   6  :  176. 

C.  903. 
To  take  his  seat  upon  our  backs  and  ride  As  statesman  con- 
quering and  to  conquer  ?     Geo  B.  D.  6  :  323.     C.  9()3. 
Statesman's.    Ten  lines,  a  statesman's  life  in  each  !     Last  Ride 

2    280.     C.  268. 
Statesmanship.       How    statesmanship  —  your    trade    Might 

figure  as  inspired  by  simple  zeal  For  serving.       Geo.  B.  D. 

6  :  319.     C.  961. 
Statesmanship  triumphs  pedestalled,  serene,  —  O  happy  con- 
summation !     Geo.  B.  D.G:  321.     C.  962. 


240  STATION  —  STOMACH 

Station.  Keep  your  station,  though  the  peak  Reached  proves 
somewhat  bare  and  bleak  !     Crist,  and  M.  6  .-203.     C.  915. 

Statue.  A  man  I  seem  as  I  had  seen  before  :  Most  like,  it  was 
some  statue  had  the  face.  Luria  2  :  372.  C.  303. 
the  marble  statue  .  .  .  They  praise  and  point  at  as  preferred 
to  life,  Yet  leave  for  the  first  breathing  woman's  smile. 
In  aB.  4:-.  140.  C.  367. 
there  the  statue  stands.  Entraps  the  eye  severer  art  repels. 
A ri.  A.  5  ■.226.     C.  675. 

Statue's,  just  a  statue's  sleepy  grace  Which  broods  o'er  its 
own  beauty.     Lin  A.  o  :  257.     C.  779. 

Statues'.  And  how  your  statues'  hearts  must  swell  !  And  how 
your  pictures  must  descend  —     Gondola  2  :  268.     C.  264. 

Statuesque.  Passively  statuesque,  in  quietude  Awaiting  judg- 
ment.    £ea.  Sig.  6 ":  419  ;  7  :  70.     C.  999. 

Stay,  hears  all,  and  only  craves  He  may  not  shame  such  ten- 
der love  and  stay.     Childe  R.  2  :331.     C.  287. 

Stays.  With  mortals  much  must  go,  but  sometliing  stays.  R. 
and  B.  3 -.71.     C.  442. 

Stealing.     No  stealing  away  —  nor   cog  nor  cozen!     Holy-C. 

2  :  317.     C.  282. 

Stealthy.  Stealthy  guests  Have  secret  watchwords,  private 
entrances.     R.  and  B.  3  :  104.     C.  455. 

Steel.     Like  so  much  cold   steel  inched    through  his   breast- 
blade.     R.  and  B.  3  :  82.     C.  446. 
Think  to  entice  the  sternness  of  the  steel  Yet  spare  love's  load- 
stone moving  manly  mind  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  331.     C.  544. 

Stefano.  Stefano  there,  .  .  .  Called  Nature's  Ape,  and  the 
world's  despair  .  .  .  (see  Vasari.)  Old  Pict.  2  :  38. 
C.  176. 

Step.  Look  one  step  onward,  and  secure  that  step  !  Para. 
1  :  39.     C.  17. 

Steward.  What  steward  but  knows  when  stewardship  earns 
its  wage,  May  levy  praise,  anticipate  the  lord  ?     R.  and  B. 

3  :  28.     C.  425. 

Stick.     I   claim   co-operation   of   a   stick.     R.  and  B.  3  :  312. 

C.  537. 
Stiffened,     stiffened  me  Straight  out  from  head  to  foot  as  dead 

man  does.  And,  thus  prepared  for  life  as  he  for  hell.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  171.     C.  482. 
Still.     While  I  stood  still  as  stone,  all  eye,  all  ear.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  205.     C.  496. 
Stimulant.     You  have  taken  up  this  thought  To  play  with,  for 

a  gentle  stimulant.     Straf.  1  :  178.     C.  68. 
Stitchery.     cobweb-work,    betinselled    stitehery.      Red    Cott. 

5  :  56.     C.  757. 
Stomach.     Our    stomach  ...  I  mean,   our    soul    is    stirred 

within,  And  we  want  words.     R.  and  B.  3  :  310.     C.  537. 


STONE  —  STRANGLED  241 

Stone,     oh,  the  strife  Of  waves  at  the  stone  some  devil  threw 

In  my  life's  midcuirent,  thwarting  God  !     Too  Late  4  :  178. 

C.  381. 
Others  go  courting  after  such  a  stone,  IVIake  it  their  mistress, 

marry  for  their  wife,  And  find  out,  some  day,  it  was  false 

the  while.     Red  Cott.  5  :  It.     C.  742. 
A  stone  Fair-colored  proves  a  solace  to  my  eye.     Sun  6  :  251. 

C.  934. 
Stoop.     (With  that  stoop  of  the  soul  which  in  bending  upraises 

it  too)     Saul  2  :  56.      C.  183. 
Stoops.      Such  ever  was  love's  way  :  to  rise,  it  stoops.     Death 

in  U.  4  :  194.     C.  386. 
Stopped.     I  have   stopped  half-way.  And  wrongly  given  the 

first-fruits  of  my  toil  To  objects  little  worthv.     Para.  1  :  95. 

C.  38. 
Storm's.     It  is  too  paltry,  such  a  transference  O'  the  storm's 

roar  to  the  cranny  of  the  stone  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  190.     C.  490. 
Story.     (The  story  always   old  and  always  new)     R.  and  B. 

3:37.     C.  429. 
Nor  must  we  marvel  here  if  impulse  urge  To   talk  the  old 

story  over  now  and  then.     R.  and  B.  3  :  348.     C.  551. 
"  Will  you  hear  my  story  also,  —  Huge  Sport,  brave  adventure 

in  plenty  ?  "     Don.  6  :  193.     C.  911. 
Story-telling.     The    knack    of  story-telling,    brightening    up 

Each    dull    old    bit  of    fact    that    drops  its   shine.     Sludge 

4  :  226.     C.  399. 
bidding  care  Keep  outside  with  the  snow-storm  ?     "  Fit  fime 

for  story-telling  !  "     Two  Poets  Q  :  SI.     C.  860. 
Strafford.     Stratford,  your   prime  support,    the  sole  roof-tree 

Which    props   this    quaking   House   of    Privilege.     Straf. 

1  :  170.     C.  65. 
Straitened.     With  straitened   habits  and  with   tastes  starved 

small.     Karshish  4  :  67.     C.  339. 
Straitness.     stung   by  straitness  of  our  life,  made   strait  On 

purpose   to  make  prized  the   life  at   large.     Cleon  4  :  122. 

C.  361. 
Strange,     though  as  strange   at  the  work  As  fribble  must  be, 

coxcomb,   fool  that 's   near  To  knave.     R.  and  B.  3  :  191. 

C.  490. 
Only  one  strange   and   wonderful    thing    more.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  206.     C.  496. 
Why,  this  is   sorry  and  strange  \     Futility,  divagation  :     R. 

and  B.  3  :  232.     C.  507. 
Strangeness.     I  do  see  strangeness  but  scarce  miserj'.  Now  it 

is  over,  and  no  danger  more.     R.  and  B.  3  :  244.     C.  511. 
Strangled,     all  her  hair  In  one  long  yellow  string  I  wound 

Three  times  her  little  throat  around,  And  strangled  her. 

Porph.  2  :  329.     C.  286. 


I 


242  STRATAGEM  — STRIVE 

Stratagem,     love    likes    stratagem   and    subterfuge  :    Which 
age,  that   once  was   youth,  should   recognize.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  24.     C.  424. 

Streak,     you,  the  lingering  streak  (A  golden  one)  in  my  good 

fortune's  eve.     Straf.  1  :  150.     C.  60. 
Stream.    Just  as  some  stream  foams  long  among  the  rocks  But 

after  glideth  glassy  to  the  sea.     Para.  1  :  107.     C.  42. 
Streamlet,     does   the    streamlet   ripple    still,   Out-smoothing 

galingale   and  watermint   Its  mat-floor?     Ari.  A.  5:103. 

C.  630. 
Street's,     the   street's   disgrace.   Grimmest  as  that  is  of   the 

gruesome  town.     R.  and  B.  3  :43.     C.  431. 
Strength,     for  strength  was  shut  in  you  None  guessed  but  I  — 

King  V.  1  :  386.     C.  152. 
strength  may  have  its  drawback,  weakness   'scapes.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  217.     C.  500. 

Came  all  the  strength  back  in  a  sudden  swell,  I  did  for  once 
see  right,  do  right,  give  tongue.     R.  and  B.  3  :273.     C.  523. 

Man's  speech  being  false,  if  but  by  consequence  That  only 
strength  is  true  !  while  man   is  weak.     R.  and  B.  3  :  471. 

C.  599. 

merely  taught.  Men  should,  for  love's  sake.  In  love's  strength, 
believe.     Death  in  D.  4  :  194.     C.  387. 

The  human  strength  that  strove  and  overthrew,  —  The  hu- 
man love  that,  weak  itself,   crowned  strength.     Prince  H. 

4  :  346.     C.  687. 

prefers  sheer  strength  to  ineffective  grace,  Breeding  and  cul- 
ture !     Fifine  4  :  391.     C.  706. 

Quieted  out  of  weakness  into  strength.  Ari.  A.  5:100. 
C.  629. 

give  fit  strength  fair  play.  And  strength 's  a  demiourgos  ! 
.4n.  yl.  5:120.     C.  636. 

such  strength  As  lets  a  life-long  labor  earn  repose  Death  sells 
at  just  that  price.     Inn  A.  o  :  270.     C.  784. 

From  edge  to  edge  Of  earths  round,  strength  and  beauty 
everywhere  Pullulate.     Chris.  Sm.  6  :  317.     C.  961. 

Ears  and  eyes  Want  so  much  strength  and  beauty,  and  no  less 
Xor  more,  to   learn   life's  lesson   by.      Chris.  Sm.  6:317. 
C.  901. 
Strife,     a  dark  and  groaning  earth  Given  over  to  a  blind  and 
endless  strife  With  evils.     Para.  1  :40.     C.  17. 

I  want  a  little  strife,  beside  ;  real  strife  ;  This  petty  palace- 
warfare  does  me  harm.     Straf.  1  :  154.     C.  59. 

Weave  we  on  earth  here  in  impotent  strife.     Master  H.  2  :  95. 
C.  196. 
Strive.     Strive,  and  hold  cheap  the  strain  ;  Learn,  nor  account 
the    pang ;   dare,    never   grudge   the    throe  !      Ben   Ezra 
4  :  186.     C.  384. 


STRIVE  —  STUMBLE  243 

Strive,     better,  youth  . . .  Should  strive,  through  acts  uncouth. 
Toward  making,  than  repose.     Ben  Ezra  4  :  188.     C.  384. 

God,  though  I  am  nothing,  be  thou  all  !  Contest  him  for  me  ! 
Strive,  for  he  is  strong  !     In?i  yl.  5  :  270.     C.  78G. 

Strive,  my  kind,  though  strife  endure  through  endless  ob- 
struction, .  .  .  each  rise  marred  by  as  certain  a  fall !  Ixion 
6  :  210.     C.  917. 

"  Strive  and  thrive  !  "  cry  "  Speed,  —  fight  on,  fare  ever  There 
as  here  ! "     Epil  ^.  6  :  440  ;  7  :  114.     C.  1007. 
Strip.     To  all  who  strip  a  vizard  from  a  face,  A  body  from  its 
])adding,  and  a  soid  From  froth.   R.  and  B.  3  :  155.    C.  476. 
Stripped.     Stripped  to   the  skin,   he  might   be  fain  to  crawl 
Worm-like  and  so  away  with  his  defeat.     R.  and  B.  3  :  83. 
C.  447. 
Strong.     Thou  need'st  the  little  solace,  thou  the  strong?     Any 
Wife  2  :  69.     C.  188. 

That  a  strong  man  should  think  himself  a  God  !  Druses 
2:107.     C.  201. 

When  is  man  strong  until  he  feels  alone  ?  Colomhe  2  :  206. 
C.  241. 

Refuse,  with  kindred  inconsistency.  To  grapple  danger 
whereby  souls  grow  strong  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  385.     C.  565. 

Yet  the  strong  man  must  go  :  For  the  journey  is  done  and  the 
summit  attained,  And  the  barriers  fall.  Prospice  4  :  216. 
C.  395. 

that  half-purpose  to  be  strong  And  merely  patient  under  mis- 
ery !     Red  Cott.  5:8.     C.  739. 

when  the  strong  man  doubts  His  strength,  the  good  man 
whether  goodness  be.     Inn  A.  5  :289.     C.  791. 

A  strong  since  joyful  man  who  stood  distinct  Above  slave- 
sorrows  to  his  chariot  linked.     Two  Poets  6  :  112.     C.  873. 

Woman 's   strong   if   man   is  weak.      Crist,    and   M.    6  :  203. 
C.  915. 
Stronger.    Having  taken  thought,  I  am  grown  stronger.    SouVs 

Tr.  2  :  358.     C.  298. 
Stud.     Thrust  out  past  service  from  the  devil's  stud  !     Childe 

R.  2  :  332.     C.  287. 
Student.     Just  as  a  drudging  student  trims  his  lamp.  Opens 
his  Plutarch.     R.  and  B.  3  :  235.     C.  508. 

Arms  crossed,  brow  bent,  tliought-immersed  ?  A  student  in- 
deed !  Pambo  6  :  236.  C.  928. 
Studies.  Fumbling  for  first  this,  then  the  other  fact  Consigned 
to  paper,  —  "studies,"  bear  the  term!  R.  and  jB.  3  :  321. 
C.  541. 
Stumble,  a  stumble  incident  Likely  enough  to  Man's  weak- 
footed  race.     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  298.     C.  953. 

And  so  we  stimible  at  truth's  very  test  !  Bishop  B.  4  :  96. 
C.  351. 


244  STUMBLING-BLOCK  — SUCCESS 

Stumbling-block.     Wliy,  Sir,  the   stumbling-block  is  cursed 
and  kicked,  Block  though  it  be.     R.  and  B.  3  :  64.     C.  439. 
a  stumbling-block  Too  vulgar,  too  absurdly  plain  i'  the  path  ! 
R.  and  B.  3  :  374.     C.  560. 

Stumbling-blocks.    Had  no  one  of  these  several  stumbling- 
blocks  Stopped  me.     R.  and  B.  3  :  442.     C.  588. 

Stung,    stung  To  madness  by  his  relegation.    R.  and  B.  3  :  287. 
C.  528. 
as  with  body  so  deals  law  with  soul  That 's  stung  to  strength 
through  weakness.     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  296.     C.  952. 

Stupid.     They  plainly  were  too  stupid  to  invent,  Too  simple  to 
distinguish  wrong  from  right.      R.  and  B.  3  :  431.     C.  583. 

Stupider.      All  men  think  all  men  stupider  than  they.      Sor. 

1  :  256.     C.  99. 

Stupidity,     the    pig-of-lead-like   pressure   Of   the   preaching 

man's  immense  stupidity.      Chris.-Eve  4:4.     C.  317. 
Subject.     Here  's  a  subject  made  to  your  hand  !     Light  W. 

2  :  278.     C.  267. 

Submission.     Show  us  the  evil  cured  by  violence,  Submission 

cures  not  also  !     Joch.  6  :  222.     C.  92i3. 
Submit.     Measured  by  Art  in  your  breadth  and  length,  You 
learned  —  to  submit  is  a  mortal's  duty.     Old  Pict.  2  :  39. 
C.  176. 
Subsoil,     the  subsoil  of  me,  mould  Whence  spring  mv  moods  : 

Prince  H.  4  :  333.     C.  683. 
Substitute.     Nor  trust  the  by-work  to  a  substitute.     Cenciaja 

5:372.     C.  822. 
Succeed.     Though  I  do  my  best  I  shall  scarce  succeed.     Life 

in  L.  2:80.     C.  192. 
Succeeds.      Why,  all  men  strive,  and  who  succeeds  ?      Last 

Ride  2  :  280.     C.  267. 
Success,     how  vain  seems  e'en  success  The  vaunted  influence 
poets  have  o'er  men  !     Pau.  1  :  13.     C.  7. 
They  look  for  every  inch  of  ground   to  vanish  Beneath  his 

tread,  so  sure  they  spy  success  !     Para.  1  :  69.     C.  28. 
hope  Dwindled  into  a  ghost  not  fit  to  cope  With  that  obstrep- 
erous joy  success  would  bring.     Childe  R.  2  :  331.     C.  287. 
This   deed  with   its  strange  unforeseen   success.     Soul's  Tr. 

2:347.     C.  293. 
Well,  are  we  demigods  or  merely  clay  ?  Is  success  still  at- 
tendant on  desert  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  174.     C.  483. 
Success  awaits  the  soon-disheartened  man.    R.  and  B.  3  :  326. 

C.  542. 
Thus   far,    too   much   success  :  I   want   the   natural   failure. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  438.     C.  586. 
the  moderate  success  Which  commonly  repays  our  strife  To 

carry  out  the  aims  of  life.     Eas.-Day  4  :  32.     C.  327. 
men  call  flare  success.     But  paint  a  fire,  it  will  not  therefore 
burn.     Bishop  B.  4  :  104.     C.  354. 


SUCCESS  —  SUN  245 

Success.     The  long  uncertain  strugp^le,  —  the  success  Anrl  con- 
summation of  the  spirit-work.     //*  a  5.  4  :  147.     C.  317. 
God    will    estimate    Success   one    day.      Prince   H.   4 :  358. 

C.  G92. 
Success  is  naught,  endeavor  's  all.     Red  Cott.  5  :  92.     C.  771. 
success    Here  and   there,  the  workman's   glory,  —  here   and 

there,  his  shame  no  less.     La  S.  6  :  64.     C.  854. 
A  minute's  success  pays  the  failure  of  years.     Apol.  and  F. 
6 : 292.     C.  951. 
Suffer.    Must  I  have  sinned  much,  so  to  suffer  !    A  Blot  2  :  152. 
C.  220. 
—  woman  the  beardless  cheek  And  proper  place  to  suffer  in 
the  side.     R.  and  B.  3  :  434.     C.  585. 
Sufferer.     Each  sufferer  says  his  sav,  his  scheme  of  the  weal 

and  woe:     Aht  V.  4. -.ISo.     C.  383. 
Suffering.     A  faculty  of  immense  suffering  Conferred  on  mind 

and  body.     Inn  A.  5:  284.     C.  789. 
Suit.     His  very  serviceable  suit  of  black  Was  courtly  once  and 

conscientious  still.     How  it  S.  4  :  58.     C.  336. 
Sulk,     deal  him  a  blow  for  a  fault,  He  would  sulk  for  whole 

days.     Ivan  6  :  134.     C.  883. 
Sulkiness.     in  a  perfect  sulkiness,  Since,  before  breakfast,  a 

mau  feels  but  queasily.     Flight  2  :  297.     C,  274. 
Sullen.     Man,  Sullen  and  silent.     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  300.     C.  954. 
Summit.     Dared  and  done  :  at  last  I  stand  upon  the  summit, 

Dear  and  True  !     LaS.6:  54.     C.  849. 
Sun.     The   broad  sun   above   laughed   a  pitiless  laugh.     How 
2:5.     C.  165. 
the  sun  looked  over  the  momitain's  rim  :  And  straight  was 

a  path  of  gold  for  him.     Parting  2  :  21.     C.  170. 
The  sun  breaks   o'er  Calvano  ;   He  strikes  the  great  gloom 
And  flutters  it  o'er  the  mount's  summit  In  airy  gold  fume. 
Engliskm.  2  :  262.     C.  261. 
The  sun  ploughed  the  fog  up  and  drove  it  asunder  This  way 

and  that.     Flight  2  :297.     C.  274. 
Our  sun  rose  out  of  yonder  mound  of  mist  :  Where  is  he  now  ? 

Luria  2  :  372.     C.  303. 
the  sudden  bloody  splendor  poured  Cursewise  in  day's  depart- 
ure by  the  sun.     R.  and  B.  3  :  12.     C.  419. 
The  sky  was  fierce  with  color  from  the  sun  Setting.  R.  and  B. 

3 : 220.     C.  502. 
So  does  the  sun  ghastlily  seem  to  sink  In  those  north  parts, 

lean  all  but  out  of  life.     R.  and  B.  3  :  396.     C.  569. 
Boundingh'  up  through   Nights  wall   dense  and   dark,  Em- 
battled crags  and  clouds,  out-broke  the  Sun.     Ber.  de  M. 
6  :  300.     C.  954. 
The  sun  that  seemed,  in  stooping,  sure  to  melt  Our  mountain- 
ridge,  is  mastered.     Ger.  de  L.6  :  351.     C.  973. 


246  SUN-TREADER  — SURPRISE 

Sun-treader.      Sun-treader,  life  and   light   be  thine  forever ! 

Pau.  1:5.     C.  4. 
Sun's.      Hast   seen,  .  .  .  earth  grow  another  something  quite 

Under  the  sun's  first  stare  ?     Ned  B.  6  :  147.     C.  889. 
What  avails  Sun's  earth-felt  thrill  To  me  ?   Ber.  de  M.  6  :  300. 

C.  9r)4. 
Sunflo"wrers.     Miles  and  miles  of  gold  and  green  Where  the 

sunflowers  blow  In  a  solid  glow.     Lovers^  Q.  2  :  28.     C.  173. 
Sunrise.     'T  was  a  simrise  of  blossoming  and  May.     Sor.  1 :  222, 

C.  86. 
sunrise,  .  .  .  Rose,  reddened,  and  its  seething  breast  Flickered 

.  .  .  grew  gold,  then  overflowed.     Pippa  1:327.     C.  129. 
deepen  to  a  sunrise,  not  decay  To  that  cold  sad  sweet  smile  ?  — 

which  I  obey.     Numph.  5  :  351.     C.  814. 
Sunset.     The   hesitating   sunset   floated   back.      Sor.    1  :  291. 

C.  113. 
The  dying  sunset  kindled  through  a  cleft  :     Childe  R.  2  :  336. 

C.  289. 
heaven's  vault    Pompous  with   sunset.       Chris.  Sm.  6  :  315. 

C.  960. 
Sunsets,     slow  pallid  sunsets  in  autumn,  ye  watch   fi'om  the 

shore.  At  their  sad  level  gaze  o'er  the  ocean.     Saul  2  :  51. 

C.  181. 
Sunshine.     Friend-making,  everj'where  friend-finding  soul.  Fit 

for  the   sunshine,  so  it   followed  him.     Soul's   Tr.  2  :  339. 

C.  290. 
Sunshine  succeeds  the  shadow  passed  away.     Luria  2  :  404. 

C.  316. 
leaf  arrests  a  streak  Of  possible  sunshine  else  would  coin  itself. 

E.  and  B.  3  :  372.     C.  560. 
Sunshine  frays  torchlight.     Ari  A.  5  :  114:.     C.  634. 
crib  From  those  clenched  lids  the  comfort  of  sunshine  !     Fust 

6  :  366.     C.  979. 
Superhuman.     The  task  seemed  superhuman,  still  I  dared  and 

did  it,  trusting  God  and  law  :     R.  and  B.  3  :  188.     C.  489. 
Superiority,     moral   pet  particular  Pretension  to  superiority. 

/«n^.  5:310.     C.  800. 
Supper-time.     It  trots  Already  through  my  head,  though  noon 

be  now.  Does  supper-time.     R.  and  B.  3  :  279.     C.  525. 
Supremacy.     Oh,   gain   were  indeed  to  see  above  Supremacy 

ever.     Reph.  6  :  433  ;  7  :  100.     C.  1004. 
Sure.     Fool !    All  that  is,  at  all.  Lasts  ever,  past  recall  ;  Earth 

changes,  but  thy  soul  and  God  stand  sure.   Ben  Ezra  4  :  190. 

C.  385. 
Surface.     Oh,  how  I  wish  some  cold  wise  man  Would  dig  be- 
neath  the   surface  which   you  scrape.     R.  and  B.  3  :  424. 

C.  581. 
Surprise,   thunderclap  of  a  surprise  :  Then  follow  all  the  signs 


i 


SURVIVES  — SWIMS  247 

and  silences  Premonitory  of  earthquake.     R.  and  B.  3  :  136. 

C.  4G8. 
Survives,     what  survives  myself  ?     The  brazen  statue  to  o'er- 

louk  my  grave.     Clean  4  :  118.     C.  3o9. 
Suspected.     It  is  no  novelty  for  innoconoe  To  be  suspected, 

but  a  privilege.     Luria  2  :382.     C.  307. 
Suspicion.     Oh,  tlie  wife  knew  the  appropriate  warfare  well, 

Tlie  way  to  put  suspicion  to  the  blush  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  u2. 

C.  434. 
keep  Each  shadow  of  suspicion  from  fair  fame.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  .333.     C.  .545. 
Sustainment.     Tliis,  too,  should  yield  sustainment  to  our  hearts 

—  He  had  commiseration  and  respect.     R.  and  B.  3  :  464. 

C.  596. 
Sustenance.     —  be  mine  the  ethereal  gust,  And  yours  the  sub- 
lunary sustenance  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  344.     C.  549. 
No  cloying  cups,  no  sickly  sweet  of  scent.  But  sustenance  at 

root,  a  bucketful.     A*,  and  B.  3  :456.     C.  593. 
SwalloTV.     charity  nigh  chokes  Ere  swallow  what  they  both 

asseverate.     R.  and  B.  3  :58.     C.  437. 
Swallows.    The  morning  swallows  with  their  songs  like  words. 

Pom.  1:4.     C.  3. 
The  snow-goose  settles  down,  the  swallows  flee  —  Why  should 

they  wait  for  winter-time  ?     Colombe  2  :  185.     C.  232. 
All  ye  highfliers  of  the  feathered  race,  Swallows  and  curlews  ! 

Gram.  Fun.  2  :  313.     C.  280. 
SwalloAvs'.     The  manner  of  the   swallows'  come-and-go  Be- 
tween the  props  o'  the  window  overhead.    R.  and  B.  3  :  163. 

C.  479. 
Swan.     Just  the  two  spots  that  span  Half  the  bill  of  the  young 

male  swan.     Lovers'  Q.  2  :  29.     C.  173. 
Geese  have  goose-thoughts  :  make  a  swan  their  teacher  .  .  . 

Let  him  introduce  swan-notions.     Pietro  6  :  170.     C.  900. 
Swans.   Geese  grow  fat  on  barley,  Swans  require  ethereal  prov- 

end.     Pietro  6  :  170.     C.  900. 
Sway.     Those  various  natures  whom  you  sway  as  one  !     Para. 

1  :  65.     C.  27. 
S'w^earing.    When  did  I  speak  so  long  without  once  swearing  ? 

Ned  B.  6  :  146.     C.  889. 
S^veet.     earth's  true  food  for  men,  Its  sweet  in  sad,  its  sad  in 

sweet  ?     Dis.  Al.  4  :  177.     C.  380. 
But  then,  how  it  was  sweet  !     Con/c.isionn  4  :215.     C.  395. 
My    life    did   and    does   smack  sweet.      At   the  M.   5:334. 

C.  808. 
Swell,    the  swell  Of  that  perfect  piece  they  sting  me  to  become 

a-strain  for.     La  S.  6  :65.     C.  854. 
S'winis.    whv,  just   Unable   to  fly,  one  swims  !      Prol.    Fifine 

4:383.    'C.  702. 


248 


SWIMS  — T^NIA 


S'wims.  one  who  mimics  flight,  Swims  —  heaven  above,  sea 
inuler,  Yet  always  earth  in  sight  ?  Prol.  Fifine  4  :  384. 
C.  702. 
Swine,  a  world  where  will  be  no  further  throwing  Pearls 
before  swine  that  can't  value  them.  Amen  !  Flight  2  :  309. 
C.  279. 
Swooned.    One  day,  I  swooned  and  got  a  respite  so.   R.  and  B. 

3:262.     C.  518. 
Sword,     the   sword   we  quiet   men   spurn   away,  you   shrewd 
knaves  pick  up.     Pippa  1:362.      C.  143. 
the  struggle  when  the  soldier's  sword  Should  sink  its  point 

before  the  statist's  pen.     Luria  2  :365.     C.  300. 
The  sword  o'  the  felon,  trembling  at  his  side,  Fit  creature  of 

a  coward.     R.  and  B.  3  :  94.     C.  451. 
She  sprang  at  the  sword  .  .  .  Drew,  brandished  it,  the  STinrise 

burned  for  joy  O' the  blade.     R.  atid  B.  3:223.     C.  503. 
with  the  sword    Man  goes  the  swiftliest  to  the  uttermost. 
Joch.  6:221.     C.  922. 
Swords,     since  swords  are  meant  to  draw.     R.  and  B.  3  :  340. 

C.  548. 
Sw^ordsman.     You  stand  confessed  the  adroiter  swordsman,  — 

ay.     R.  and  B.  3  :  414.     C.  577. 
Symbol.     'T  is  a  figure,  a  symbol,  say  ;  A  thing's  sign  :  now  for 
the  thing  signified.     R.  and  £.3:1.     C.  415. 
our  mortal  purblind  way  Of  seeking  in  the  symbol  no  mere 
point  .  .  .  But  things.     Ber.  de  M.  6  :299.     C.  954. 
Sympathy.     Some   latent  virtue  may  be  lingering  yet,  Some 
human  sympatliy.     SouVs  Tr.  2  :339.     C.  290. 
Through   gaping  impotence  of  sympathy.     R.  and  B.  3  :  342. 

C.  549. 
The  popular  sympathy  that 's  round  me  now  Would   break 
like  bubble  that  o'er-domes  a  fly.   R.  and  B.  3  :  443.     C.  588. 
There  are  two  things  i'  the  world,  still  wiser  folk  Accept  — 

intelligence  and  sympathy.      Prince  H.  4  :  343.     C.  687. 
It  was  a  sight  to  melt  a  stone,  that  thaw  Of  rigid  disapproval 

into  dew  Of  sympathy.     Red  Cott.  5  :  57.     C.  758. 
Needs  there  groan  a  world  in  anguish  just  to  teach  us  sym- 
pathy.    La  S.  6:65.     C.  854. 
Sympathies.     Small  separate  sympathies  combined  and  large, 
Nothings  that  were,  grown  something  very  much.    R.  and  B. 
3:25.     C.  424. 


Tables,     tables  do  tip  In  the  oddest  way  of  themselves.    Sludge 

4  :  226.     C.  399. 
Taenia.     Each  taenia  tliat  had  sucked  me  dry  of  juice.     R.  and 

ii.  3:439.     C.  587. 


TAINT  — TEACH  249 

Taint.     What  rampart  or  invisible  borlj^-jriiard  Keeps  off  the 

taint  of  common  life  from  such.     7^.  and  B.  3  ;  43.     C.  431. 
Take.     Take  me  as  you  would  take  a  dog,  I  think,  Masterless 

left  for  strangers  to  maltreat.     R.  and  B.  3  :  207.     C.  49G. 
Take  them,  Love,  the   book  and  me  together.       One   Word 

4  :  124.     C.  361. 
Tale.     Tale  followed  tale  like  a  merry-go-round.     Don.  6  :  193. 

C.  911. 
Tale-concocter.     '  Avaunt,  delusive  talc-concocter,  news  Cruel 

as  meteor  simulating  dawn  ! '     Shah  A.  6:  245.     C.  931. 
Talk,     tarriers  turned  again  to  talk  And  trim  the  balance.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  15.     C.  420. 
Let  me  talk,  Or  leave  me,  at   your  pleasure  !   talk  I  must. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  407.     C.  573. 
How   obvious   and   how   easy  't  is   to   talk   Liside    the   soul. 

Prince  H.  4  :  378.     C.  700. 
talk,  talk,  talk  about  the  empty  name  While  thing's  self  lies 

neglected.     Ari.  4.5:  144.     C.  646. 
Talked,     all  this  talk  talked,  'T  was  not  for  nothing  that  we 

talked,  I  hope  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  142.     C.  471. 
Talking.     I  can  always  leave  off  talking  when  I  hear  a  mas- 
ter play  !     Toccata  2  :  36.     C.  175. 
So  sat  I  talking  with  my  mind.     Ckris.-Eve  4  :  26.     C.  325. 
Tangle-twine.     Tangle-twine  of  leaf  and  bloom  that  intercept 

the  air  one  breathes.     La  S.  6  :57.     C.  851. 
Tapestry.     A  wreck  of  tapestry,  proudly-purposed  web  When 

reds  and  blues  were  indeed  red  and  blue.     R.  and  B.  3  :2. 

C.  415. 
tick  of  the  insect  turning  tapestry  Which  a  queen's  finger 

traced  of  old,  to  dust.     Prinre  H.  4  :350.     C.  689. 
Tares.     Why   grant   tares    leave   to   thus   o'er-top,   o'ertower 

Their  field-mate  —     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  298.     C.  953. 
Task.     Let  each  task  present  Its  petty  good  to  thee.     Para. 

1 :  39.     C.  17. 
On  !     Give  yourself,   excluding  aught  beside,  To  the  day's 

task.     Sor.  1  :  228.     C.  88. 
God's  task  to  make  the  heavenly  period  Perfect  tlie  earthen  ? 

Gram.  Fun.  2  :  312.     C.  280. 
Tasks.     God  tasks  him,  and  will  not  absolve  Task's  negligent 

performer  !      Two  Poets  6  :  90.     C  8(54. 
Taste.     Grosser  than  a  taste  demands  which  —  craving  manna 

—  kecks  at  peason.     Pietro  6  :  177.     C.  904. 
Tatters.     Tatters   all   too   contaminate   for   use.     R.   and   B. 

3  :  364.     C.  557. 
Teach.     Teach   me,   only  teach.    Love !     As   I   ought   I   will 

speak   thy   speech,    Love,   Think   thy   thought.      Woman^s 

2:23.     C.  171. 
To  look  like  nothing  done  with  any  such  intent  As  teach  men 


250 


TEACH  —  TEMPTATION 


—  tliough  perchance  it  teach,  by  accident !     Fifine  4  :  415. 
C.  719. 
Teach.     Do    I  make  pretence  To  teach,  myself  unskilled  in 

learning  ?     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  336.     C.  968. 
Tear.     A  tear  —  no  woman's  tribute,  weak  exchange  For  action, 
water    spent   and    heart's-blood    saved.      Ari.   A.   5:131. 
C.  641. 
Tears.     »Slight  starting  tears  easily  wiped  away.     Sor.  1:325. 
C.  127. 
You  coimsel  I  go  plant  in  garden-plot.  Water  with  tears.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  428.     C.  582. 
came  up  now  to  light,  And  left  behind  such  littleness  as  tears. 

Balau.  4  :  312.     C.  621. 
Tears—  What  good  they  do  !     Ivan  6  :  137.     C.  884. 
What  if  the  rose-streak  of  morning  Pale  and  depart  in  a  pas- 
sion of  tears  ?     Apol.  and  F.  6  :  292.     C.  951. 
the  eyes  Of  all  the  lookers-on  let  tears  fall  fast.     Dan.  Bar. 

6  :  308.     C.  957. 
Eyes,  calm  beside  thee   (Lady,  couldst  thou  know  !)      May 
turn  away  thick  with  fast  gathering  tears.     Sonnet  C.  11. 
Teeth.     There,    let   my   sheepskin-garb,   a   curse    on 't,   go  — 
Leave  my  teeth  free  if  I  must  show  my  shag  !     R.  and  B. 
3:413.     C.  576. 
Tried  whisker-plucking,  and  so  found  what  trap  The  whisker 
kept  perdue,  two  rows  of  teeth.     R.  and  B.  3  :  430.    C.  583. 
Telling.     Ah,  you  trick-betraver  !     Telling  tales,  imwise  one  ? 

Flute-M.  C):  422  ;  7  :  76.     C.  1000. 
Temper.     True  !  serene  deadness  Tries  a  man's  temper.     An- 
other W.  2  :  76.     C.  190. 
When  out  of  temper  at  the  dinner  spoilt.  On  meddling  mo- 
ther-in-law and  tiresome  wife.     R.  and  B.  3  :  123.     C.  463. 
Tempest,     here  comes  the  whole  of  the  temi^est !     Englislan. 

2  :  259.     C.  261. 
Tempest's,     folk  who  shudder  at  each  lift  Of  the  old  tjrant 

tempest's  whirl  wind-lash.      Two  Poets  6  :  79.     C.  860. 
Temple,     as  some  temple  seemed  My  soul,  where  naught  is 
changed  .  .  .  only  God  is  gone.     Pau.  1:12.     C.  6. 
as  some  temple  seemed  My  soul,  where   nought  is  changed 
and  incense  rolls  Around  the  altar,  only  God  is  gone.     Pau. 
1:12.* 
Druids  their  temple,  Christians  have  their  dome  :    So  with 
mankind.     Tivo  Poets  Q -.SI.     C.  860. 
Temporizing.     Miserable  hound  !     This  comes  of  temporizing. 

SouVs  Tr.  2  :  344.     C.  292. 
Tempt,     the    proper   prize  to  tempt   Souls  less  world-weary. 

Inn  A.o:  284.     C.  789. 
Temptation.     Unluckily  temptation  is  at  hand  —  To  take  re- 
venge on  a  trifle  overlooked.     R.  and  B.  3  :  121.     C.  462. 


TEMPTATION  — TIIEMISTOKLES  251 

Temptation.      Why  conies  temptation  but   for  man  to  meet 

And  master  and  make  crouch  beneath  his  foot,  And  so  be 

pcdestalled  in  triumph  ?     It.  and  B.  3  :  382.     C.  5(54. 
Tempting,     here    lay,   tempting   foot,   the   meadow-side,  And 

there    the    coppice   rang   with   singing-birds  !      R.  and  B. 

3  :  162.     C.  479. 
Tended,     are  not  such  Used  to  be  tended,  flower-like,  every 

feature,  As  if  one's  breath  would  fray  the  lily  of  a  crea- 
ture ?     Pippa  l:?,'iQ.     C.  130. 
Tender.     Tender  and  true  —  tradition  tells  of  such.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  75.     C.  444. 
Tergiversation,     when  they  tax  yon  with  tergiversation  or  du- 
plicity, you  may  answer —  .   .  .  both  great  parties  in  the 

State,  .  .  .  are   found  working  together   for   the  common 

good.     SouVs  Tr.  2  :  355.     C.  296. 
Terrifies.     lie   terrifies  men  and  they  fall   not  off.     King  C. 

1  : 404.     C.  159. 
Terror.     What  it  was  struck  the  terror  into  me  ?     Imp.  Aug. 

6  :  424  ;  7  :  82.     C.  1001. 
Terrors.     So   will   it   prove   as   long   as   priests    may   preach 

Spiritual  terrors  !     Red  Cott.  5  :  61.     C.  759. 
Test.     Devise  some  test  of  love,  some  arduous  feat  To  be  per- 
formed for  you.     Para.  1  :  30.     C.  13. 
Testimony,     who  trusts  To  human  testimony  for  a  fact  Gets 

this  sole  fact  —  himself  is  proved  a  fool.     R.  and  B.  3  :  471. 

C.  599. 
Tetchy.     Tetchy  at  all   sights  and  sounds  and  pettish  at  each 

idle  charm.     La  S.  6  :  oS.     C.  851. 
Tether,     the  change,  The  monitory  touch  o'  the  tether  —  ... 

only  recognized  aright  I'  the  fulness  of  the  davs,  for  God's. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  374.     C.  560. 
Thank.     Will  you  not  thank,  praise,  bid  me  to  your  breasts 

For  having  done  the  thing  you  thonglit  to  do.     R.  and  B. 

3 : 186.     C.  489. 
Thank,  praise,  love  (Sum  up  thus)  for  the  lowest  favors  first, 

The  commonest  of  comforts  !     Plot-C.  6  :  265.     C.  939. 
Thanks.     Thanks  meantime    for  the   story,    long   and  strong, 

A  pretty   piece   of    narrative   enough.     R.   and   B.    3 :  11. 

C.  418. 
Thanksgiving-psalm.     There  's   some   appropriate  service  to 

intone,  Some  gaudeamus  and  thanksgiving-psalm  !     R.  and 

B.  3  :  444.     C.  589. 
Thee.     Therefore   to  whom  turn  I  but  to  Thee,  the   ineffable 

Name  ?     AhtV.4::  184.     C.  383. 
As  still  to  its  asymptote  speedeth  the  curve.  So  approximates 

Man  —  Thee.     Fust  6  :  381.     C.  985. 
Themistokles.     Woe    for    Themistokles  —  Satrap   in    Sardis 

court  !     Name  not  the  clown  like  these  !     Echet.  6  :  154. 

C. 893. 


252 


THEORBO  —  THOUGHT 


Theorbo.     With    which    moral  I    drop    mv   theorbo.      Glove 

2 : 251.     C.  258. 
Theories,     ni}'  theories  "Were  firm,  so  them  I  left,  to  look  and 

learn  Mankind.     Pau.  1  :  11.     C.  6. 
my  theories  Were  firm,  so  I  left  them,  to  look  upon  Men  and 

their  cares  and  hopes  and  fears  and  joys.     Pan.  1  :  11.* 
Theorizing.     The    instinctive  theorizing  whence  a  fact  Looks 

to  the    eye   as  the  eye  likes  the  look.     R.  and    B.  3 :  20. 

C.  422. 
Thesis.     In  thesis  published  with   the  world's    applause.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  146.     C.  472. 
Thief.     'T  was   a   thief   said   the   last   kind   word   to   Christ : 

Christ  took  the  kindness  and  forgave  the  theft.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  208.     C.  497. 

Thieves.     I  end.   Telling   the  truth  !     Your  self-styled   shep- 
herd thieves  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  413.     C.  576. 

Things,     't  is   flowers  —  mere    words  —  he  finds  When  things 
—  that 's  fruit  —  he  looked  for.     Joch.  6  :  225.     C.  924. 

Think.     You   think   so  ?     Well,    I   do   not.     Kiinj  V.    1  :  369. 
C.  145. 
Think,  as   if   man 

4  :  353.     C.  690. 
Therefore   I  say  .  . 

my     breath    for 
C.  873. 

Thorn,     succumbs,  Bloodies  its  last  thorn  with  unflinching  foot. 
R.and  B.^:QS.     C.  441. 

so  a  thorn   Comes  to  the  aid  of  and   completes  the  rose.     R. 
and  B.  3  :  371.     C.  559. 
Thou.     O  Thou,  —  as  represented  here  to  me  In  such  concep- 
tion as  my  soul  allows,  —     R.  and  B.  3  :  385.     C.  565. 

O  Thou,  the  one  force  in  the  whole  variation  Of  visible  nature. 
Fu»t  6  :  380.     C.  985. 
Thought,     some  wild    thought  which,  but   for  me,  were  kept 
From  out  thy  soul  as  from  a  sacred  star  !     Pau.  1:1.     C.  2. 

Like  some    clear  thought  which  harsh  words   veiled  before. 
Pau.  1:24.     C.  11. 

thought  may  take  perception's  place  But  hardly  co-exist  in 
anv  case.     Sor.  1  :  229.     C.  89. 

Thought  is  the  soul  of  act.     Sor.  1  :  297.     C.  115. 

not  a  thought  to  be  seen  On  his  steady  brow  and  quiet  mouth. 
Stat,  and  B.  2  :  324.     C.  284. 

some  splendor  once  thy  verv  thought,  Some  benediction  an- 
ciently thy  smile  :     R.  and  B.  3  :  32.     C.  427. 

Stark-naked   thought   is   in  request   enough.      Trans.   4 :  57. 
C.  335. 

The  thought  grew  frightful,  't  was  so  wildly  dear  !     Pict.  Ig . 
4  :  73.     C.  342. 


had  never  thought    before  !     Prince   H. 

.  .  no,  shall  not  say,  but  think.  And  save 
better     purpose.       Tico     Poets     6 :  112. 


THOUGHT  — THRUSH  253 

Thought.     Stung  bv  the  splendor  of  a  sudden  thought.     Death 
in  D.  4  :  192.     C.  386. 
Some  thought  that  perched  there,  tame  and  tunable,  Fitted 

with  wings.     Balau.  4  :  268.     C.  604. 
Thought  hankers  after  speech,   while  no  speech  may  evince 

Feeling  like  music.     Fijine  4  :  423.     C.  724. 
did  always  say  he  thought  he  felt  He  feared   as  if  this  very 
chance  might  fall  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  53.     C.  435. 
Thoughts,     have  thoughts  like  these  e'er  shaped  themselves 
In  other  brains  than  mine  ?     Para.  1  :  63.     C.  26. 
clothe  the  airiest  thoughts  in  sjjecious  breath.     Para.  1  :  72. 

C.  29. 
Thoughts  may  be  Over-poetical  for  poetry.    Sor.  1  :  244.    C.  95. 
Oh,    old    thoughts    they   cling,   they   cling  !     Flight    2 :  292. 

C.  272. 
sift  my  thoughts  —  Thouglits  I  throw  like  the  flax  for  sun  to 

bleach  !      R.  and  B.  3  :  270.     C.  522. 
—  True  thoughts,  good  thoughts,  thoughts  fit  to  treasure  up  ! 

Trans.  4  :  57.     C.  335. 
Thoughts  hardly  to  be  packed  Into  a  narrow  act.     Ben  Ezra 

4  :  189.     C.  385. 
Man's  thoughts  and  loves  and  hates  !     Epil.  Pacch.  5  :  392. 
C.  829. 
Thoughtlessness.     A  thick  feather-bed  Of  thoughtlessness,  no 
operating   tool  —  Framed    to    transpierce    the    flint-stone. 
Red  Colt.  5 :  28.     C.  746. 
Thread.     He  holds  on  firmly  to  some  thread  of  life.     Karshish 

4  :  68.     C.  339. 
Threadbare,     worn   threadbare   of    soul    By   forty-six   years' 

rubbing  on  hard  life.     R.  and  B.  3  :  115.     C.  459. 
Threatened.     If  only  I  was  threatened  and  belied.  What  mat- 
ter ?     I  could  bear   it  and  did   bear.     R.    and  B.  3  :  273. 
C.  523. 
Three.     This  is  the  doctrine  he  was  wont  to  teach,  .  .  .  Three 
souls  which  make  up  one  soul  :    Death  in  D.  4  :  193.    C.  386. 
What   Does,  what   Knows,  what  Is  ;  three   souls,  one   man. 
Death  in  D.  4  :  193.     C.  386. 
Thrill.     That  thrill  of  dawn's  suffusion  through  my  dark.     R. 
and  B.  3  :  251.     C.  514. 
Whence,  then,  this  quite  new  quick  cold  thrill,  —  cloud-like. 
R.  and  B.  3  :  384.     C.  564. 
Throat,     thick  at  throat,  with  waterisli  under-eye.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  26.     C.  425. 
Throe.     Some    throe   Must    needs   unlock    love's   prison-bars. 

Bea.  Sig.  6  :  419  ;  7  :  71.     C.  999. 
Thrush,     the  wise  thrush  ;  he  sings  each  song  twice  over,  Lest 
you   sliould  think  he  never  could   recapture  The  first  tine 
careless  rapture  !     Home-T.  A.'l -.AQ.     C.  179. 


254  THUNDER  —  TIME 

Thunder.     Heaven  grows   dark  above  :    Let 's  snatch  one  mo- 
ment ere  the  thunder  fall.     Straf.  1  :133.     C.  51. 
a  little  year  ago  They  heard  him  thunder  at  the  thing  which, 
lo,  To-day  he   vaunts  for   unscathed.     Geo.  B.  D.  G  :  3li4. 
C.  963. 

Thunders,  thunders  resound,  Vault-roof  reverberates,  groans 
the  groimd  !     Apol.  and  F.  6  :  293.     C.  951. 

Thunderbolt,  can  pulverize  Marble  pretension  —  how  much 
more,  make  moult  A  peacock-prince  his  plume  — God's 
thunderbolt  !     Two  Poets  6  :  85.     C.  862. 

Thundered.  One  day,  it  thundered  and  lightened.  Adam 
6  :  207.     C.  916. 

Thundrous.  As  when  a  thundrous  midnight,  with  black  air 
Tiiat  burns,  raindrops  that  blister  —  R.  and  B.  3 :  382. 
C.  564. 

Tide,  the  world's  tide  Rolls,  and  what  hope  of  parting  from 
the  press  Of  waves,  a  single  wave  through  weariness  Gen- 
tly lifted  aside,  laid  upon  shore  ?  Sor.  1  :  279.  C.  108. 
What  matter  if  hurried  over  The  harbor-boom  'by  a  great 
favoring  tide,  or  the  last  of  a  spent  ripple.  R.  and  B. 
3  :  171.     C.  482. 

Tides.     Do  tides  abate  and  sea-fowl  hunt  i'  the  deep  —    R.  and 

B.  3  :  367.     C.  558. 

Tiger-cat.     The    tiger-eat    screams  now,  that   whined   before. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  29.     C.  426. 
Time.    '  Time  fleets,  youth  fades,  life  is  an  empty  dream.'   Para. 

1:47.     C.  20. 
Knowing  ourselves  our  world,  our  task  so  g^eat.  Our  time  so 

brief.     P«ra.  1:57.     C.  24. 
wherefore  not   feel  sure  .  .  .  That   time  will  do  me  right  ? 

Slraf.  1  :  184.     C.  71. 
time,  who  in  the  twilight  comes  to  mend  All  the  fantastic  day's 

caprice.     Straf.  1  :184.     C.  71. 
And  here  I  let  time  slip  for  naught  !     Pippa  1 :  328.     C.  129. 
Time,  .  .  .  soon  or  late  may  take  Our  foresight  by  surprise 

through  chance  and  change.  Luria  2  :396.  C.  313. 
so  time  treats  ugly  deeds.  R.  and  B.  3  :  111.  C.  458. 
I   sat  stone-still,  let  time  run  over  me.     R.  and  B.  3:211. 

C.  498. 

I'  the  how  and  why  and  when,  the  time  to  laugh.  The  time  to 

w^eep,  the  time,  again,  to  pray.     R.  and  B.  3  :  311.     C.  537. 
Ah,  but   if  von  knew  how  time    has  dragged,  days,  nights  ! 

Epil.  Fifine  4  :  444.     C.  736. 
Where  nobody  esteems  it  worth  his  while,  If  time  upon  the 

clock-face  goes  asleep,  To  give  the  rusted  hands  a  helpful 

push.     Red  Cott.  5:4.     C.  737. 
time  means   amelioration,  tardily  enough  displayed.     La  S. 

6:68.     C.  855. 


TIME  — TOLERABLY-OBSTINATE  255 

Time.     Count  we  no  time  lost  time  which  lags  through  respect 

to  the  gods  !     Phei.  6  :  125.     C.  878. 
Time  left  uusickled  yet  the  plenteous  crop.        Joch.  G  :  211. 

C.  918. 
Never  the  time  and  the  place  And  the  loved  one  all  together  ! 

Never  Q  •.2?,o.     C.  928. 
Time   is    short,   Life's  days  compose  a   span,  —  as   brief   be 

speech  !     Bean-St.  G  :  271.     C.  942. 
Time's,     till  time's  mid-night  Shrouds  all  —  or  better  say,  the 

shutting    light   Of  a   forgotten    yesterday.      Sor.    1  :  287. 

C.  111. 
gnawn  hollow  by  Time's  tooth.     Red  Cott.  5  :  24.     C.  745. 
Times.     Times  gi'ow  better  too,  And  should  they  worsen,  why, 

who  langiis,  forgets.     Ari.  A.  5  :  121.     C.  637. 
Timid,     the  man,  —  So  timid  when  the  business  was  to  touch 

The    uncertain   order   of    humanity.      Prince    H.   4 :  365. 

C.  695. 
Tinker,     the   Tinker   in    our   cage,  Pulled-np   for   gospelling, 

twelve  years  ago.     Ned  B.  6  :  146.     C.  889. 
Tiptoes.      gingerly    treader   on   tiptoes   with    finger   on    lip. 

SouVs  Tr.  2  :  348.     C.  293. 
Titillate,     the  fine  and  improvised  Point  that  can  titillate  the 

brain  o'  the  Bench  Torpid  with  over-teaching.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  285.     C.  527. 
Titles.     Titles  and  badges  are  exercised  as  such  a  weapon,  to 

which  you  and    I    look  up  wistfully.      SouVs  Tr.   2  :  357. 

C.  297. 
Titter.     The  titter  stifled  in  the  hollow  palm  Which  rubbed  the 

eyebrow  and  caressed  the  nose.     R.  and  B.  3  :  189.    C.  489. 
To-day.     To-day   the  sweets  of  reigning  :    let   to-morrow   Be 

ready  with  its  bitters.     King  V.  1:  389.     C.  153. 
step  and  step  .  .  .  from  the  level  of  to-day  Up  to  the  summit 

of  so  long  ago.     R.  and  B.  3  :  30.     C.  426. 
To-day's.     Oh,  't  were  too  absurd  to  slight  For  the  hereafter 

the  to-day's  delight  !     Sor.  1:315.     C.  123. 
To-day's  brief  passion  limits  their  range  ;  It  seethes  with  the 

morrow  for  us  more  and  more.     Old  Pict.  2  :40.     C.  177. 
To-morrow.     My  dim  to-morrow  —  your  plain  to-day.     Epil. 

Mihrah  6  :  256.     C.  936. 
Toil.    'Tis  a  life-long  toil  till  our  lump  be  leaven  —  The  better  ! 

Old  Pict.  2 -AO.     C.  177. 
these    half -hour   playings   at   life's   toil.      Red    Cott.   5:49. 

C.  755. 
as  certainly.  The  end  of  sleep  means,  toil  is  triumphed  o'er. 

Bean-St^ 6 -.274:.     C.  943. 
Told.      you  're  not  told   Your  right-hand  serves  you,  or  your 

children  love  you !     Straf.  1  :  142.     C.  55. 
Tolerably-obstinate.     —  You  know  —  the  tolerably -obstinate, 


256  TOMBS  — TOUCHED 

The  not-so-mucli-perverse  but  you  may  train.     R.  and  B. 
3  :  445.     C.  589. 

Tombs.  Are  yon  —  which  shimmer 'mid  the  shady  Tombs  or 
no  ?     St.  Mart.  5  :  353.     C.  814. 

Tombstones,  tired  as  tombstones,  head-piece  foot-jjiece,  when 
they  lean  Each  to  other,  drowsed  in  fog-smoke,  o'er  a  cof- 
fined Past  between.     CUve  0  :  157.     C.  894. 

Tome,  a  huge  tome  in  an  antique  guise,  Primitive  print  and 
tongue  half  obsolete.     R.  and  B.  3  :  28.     C.  425. 

Tone.  In  tone  so  oujinously  mild,  With  smile  terrifically  soft. 
Fll.  Bald.  5  :  384.     C.  82G. 

Tones,  ears  all  a-tingle  yet  With  tones  few  hear  and  live,  but 
none  forget.      Two  Poets  6  :  92.     C.  865. 

Tongue.     Oh,  power  of  life  and  death  In  the  tongue,  as  the 
Preacher  saith  !     Lovers'  Q.  2  :  30.     C.  173. 
his    tongue   at  times   is   hard  to   curb.      R.    and   B.    3  :22. 

C.  423. 
the  tongue  should  prove  a  two-edged   sword,  No  axe  sharp 
one  side,  blunt  the  other  way.     R.  and  B.  3  :474.     C.  GOO. 
his  tongue  After  long  lockiug-up  is  loosed  for  once.     Inn  A. 

5:277.     C.  787. 
Each  heart  with  its  conception  seethes  And  simmers,  but  no 
tongue  speaks,     hmn  6  :  138.     C.  885. 

Tools.  "  Mothers,  wives  and  maids.  These  be  the  tools  where- 
with priests  manage  men."     R.  and  B.  3  :117.     C.  460. 

Top-peak.  Here  's  the  top-peak  ;  the  multitude  below  Live, 
for  they  can,  there.      Gram.  Fun.  2  :  313.     C.  280. 

Tophet's.  Tophet's  tool,  on  earth  left  unaware.  Or  brought  to 
sharpen  its  rusty  teeth  of  steel.     Childe  R.  2  :  334.     C.  288. 

Torture,     they  were  wont  to  tease  the  truth  Out  of  loath  wit- 
ness (toying,  trifling  time)  By  torture.     R.  and  B.  3  :  23. 
C.  423. 
What  crime  that  ever  was,  ever  will  be.  Deserves  the  tor- 
ture ?     Then  abolish  it !     R.  and  B.  3  :  142.     C.  471. 
so  putting,  day  by  day,  hour  by  hour.  The  untried  torture  to 

the  untouched  place.     R.  and  B.  3  :  369.     C.  559. 
I  cannot  bring  myself  to  quite  believe  This  is  a  place  you  tor- 
ture people  in.     R.  and  B.  3  :  224.     C.  504. 

Tortured.  What  if  the  girl-wife,  tortured  with  due  care. 
Should  take,  as  though  spontaneously,  the  road —     R.  and 

B.  3  :  84.     C.  447. 

This  getting  tortured  merely  in  the  flesh.  Amounts  to  almost 
an  agreeable  change.     R.  and  B.  3  :  143.     C.  471. 
Touch.     Yet  rocks  split,  —  and  the  blow-ball  does  no  more, 
Quivers  to  feathery  nothing  at  a  touch.     R.  and  B.  3  :  217. 

C.  500. 

Touched.  You  are  touched  ?  So  am  I,  quite  otherwise,  If 
'tis  with  pity.     R.  and  B.  3 -A'lB.     C.  581. 


TOURIST  — TREE  257 

Tourist.     Yet  untroubled  by  the  tourist,  touched  on  by  no  tra- 
vel-book.    La  S.  e-.m.     C.  850. 
Townish.     townish  trade-mark  that  stamps   word   and   deed. 

Red  Colt.  5  :  22.     C.  744. 
Tcwns.     since  men  congregate  In  towns,  not  woods,  —  to  Ispa- 
han forthwith  !     Eagle  6  :  241.     C.  930. 
Toys,     toys,    permissible    to-day,   become   Follies   to-morrow. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  346.     C.  550. 
Trace.     Therefore  he  pencilled  her  such  letter  first,  Then  made 

her  trace  in  ink  the  same  again.    R.  and  B.  3  :282.    C.  520. 
Tradition.     Tradition  must  precede  all  scripture,  words  Serve 

as  our  warrant  ere   our  books  can  be.     R.  and  B.  3  :  343. 

C.  549. 
wise  tradition  which  took,  at  the  time,  Note  that  served  till 

slow   history   ventured    on   fact.     Ponte  A.  6:411;  7:56. 

C.  996. 
Tragic  Muse,     the  Tragic  Muse  !     She  who  instructs  her  poet. 

Bid  man's  soul  Play  man's  part  merely.     Ari.  A.  5  :  131. 

C.  641. 
Traitor.     "  Traitor,"  did  he  say,  Bending  that  eye,  brimful  of 

bitter  fire,  Upon  me  ?     Straf.  1: 168.     C.  64. 
That  he  no  traitor  proved,  this  and  this  only  tells  —  Over  the 

corpse   of  him   trod   foe   to  foe's   success.     Ivan   6  :  140. 

C.  886. 
Traitor's.     The  example  of  a  traitor's  happy  fortune  Would 

bring   more   evil   in   the   end   than   good.      Liiria   2 :  386. 

C.  309. 
Transition-stage.    'T  is  the  transition-stage,  the  tug  and  strain, 

That  strike  men.     Prince  H.  4  :  347.     C.  688. 
Travel.     Full  of  his  travel,  struck  at  himself.     Flight  2  :291. 

C.  272. 
One   needs   but   little    tackle  to   travel    in.      Flight   2 :  308. 

C.  278. 
Tree.     Art  thou  the  tree  that  props  the  plant.  Or  the  climbing 

plant  that  seeks  the  tree  —  Canst  thou  help  us,  must  we 

help  thee  ?     Flight  2  :  303.     C.  270. 
tree  .  .  .  That  holds  in  all  its  leafy  green  and  gold  The  sun 

now   like   an   immense   egg   of   fire  ?     R.  and  B.  3 :  219. 

C.  501. 
a  tree,  which  turns  Away  from  the  north  wind  with  what  nest 

it  holds.     R.  and  B.  3  :  219.     C.  502. 
like  a  tree  That  buds  and  blooms,  nor  seeks  to  know  The  law 

by  which  it  prospers  so.     Joh.  Agri.  4  :  71.     C.  341. 
So   may  some    stricken   tree  look   blasted,  bough  and   bole. 

Champed  by  the  fire-tooth,  charred  without,  and  yet,  thrice- 
bound   With    dreriment  about,  within  may  life  be  found. 

Ned  B.  6  :  147.     C.  890. 
the  tree  's  a  ghost !     Perished  it  starves,  black  death  from  top- 


258  TREE-TOPS  —  TRIUMPH 

most    bough    To    farthest-reaching  fibre  !     Joch.   6 :  223. 
C.  923. 
Tree-tops,      how  peaceful    sleep    The   tree-tops   altogether ! 
Para.  1:84.     C.  34. 
Overhead  the  tree-tops  meet.     Pippa  1:364.     C.  144. 
Trees,     the  sick  Expostulating  trees.     Sor.  1:  271.     C.  10.^. 
Tress,     this  tress,  and  this,  I  touch  But  cannot  praise,  I  love  so 

much  !     Song  2  :  22.     C.  171. 
Tresses.     How  the  tresses  curled  Into  a  sumptuous  swell  of 
gold  and  wound  About  her  like  a  glory  !    Sor.  1 :  214.    C.  83. 
tresses  .  .  .  Blue-black,  lustrous,  thick  like  horsehairs.     Solil. 
2  :  12.     C.  167. 
Trial.     Whose  trial  is  done,  whose  lot  is  cast  With  those  who 
watch  but  work  no  more.   Who  gaze  on  life  but  live  no 
more.     Para.  1 :  53.     C.  22. 
Was   the   trial   sore  ?     Temptation   sharp  ?      Thank   God   a 

second  time  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  382.     C.  564. 
I  am  near  the  end  ;  but  still  not  at  the  end  ;  All  to  the  very 

end  is  trial  in  life.     R.  and  B.  3  :  385.     C.  565. 
't  is  my  Trial  that  bites  Like  a  corrosive,  so  the  cards  are 
packed.  Dice  loaded,  and  my  life-stake  tricked  away  !     R. 
and  B.  3  :  442.     C.  588. 
Tribunal,     there  's  a  new  tribunal  now  Higher  than  God's  — 

the  educated  man's  !     R.  and  B.  3 :  399.     C.  571. 
Trick.     No  mean  trick  He  left  untried,  and   truly  well-nigh 
wormed  All  traces  of  God's  finger  out  of  him  :  Then  died, 
grown  old.     Para.  1  :  64.     C.  26. 
a  trick  Learnt  to  advantage  once  and  not  unlearned  When 

past  the  use.     King  V.  1  :  378.     C.  149. 
Judged  a  new  trick  should  reinforce  the  old,  Send  vigor  to 

the  lie  now  somewhat  spent.     R.  and  B.  3  :  38.     C.  429. 
Whose  mean  soul  grins  through  this  transparent  trick.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  201.     C.  494. 
When  all 's  done,  just  a  well-intentioned  trick,  That  tries  for 
truth  truer  than  truth  itself.     R.  and  B.  3  :  404.     C.  572. 
Tried.     You   might  have  turned  and  tried  a  man.      By  Fire. 

2  :  66.     C.  187. 

Trifles,     trifles  serve  To  make  the  minutes  pass  in  winter-time. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  349.     C.  551. 
trifles  mean  and  base  Which  vex  the  sight  that  cannot  say 

them  nay.     Ger.  de  L.  6  :  345.     C.  971. 
Trinity.     I'  the  name  of  the  indivisible  Trinity  !     R.  and  B. 

3  :  145.     C.  472. 

Triumph.     There,  at  the  journey's  all  but  end,  it  seems.  Tri- 
umph deceived  them  and  undid  them   both.      R.  and  B. 
3  :  54.     C.  435. 
triumph  suppled  the  tongue  A  little,  malice  glued  to  his  diy 
throat.     R.  and  B.  3  :  221.     C.  502. 


TRIUMPH  — TRUMPETING  259 

Triumph.     So  triumph  ever  shall  renew  itself;  Ever  shall  end 

in  efforts  higher  yet.    In  a  B.4^:  147.     C.  370. 

—  dear  is  triumph  bought  If  it  means  only  hasking  in   the 

midst  Of  fame's  brief  sunshine.     Two  Poets  G  :  89.     C.  8G4. 

Laud  then  Man's  life  —  no  defeat  but  a  triumph  !     Apol.  and 

F.  6  :  292.     C.  951. 
Ah,  friends,  the  fresh  triumph  soon  flickers,  fast  fades  !     Fust 

6 : 382.     C.  986. 
And  lo,  I  fling  age,  sorrow,  sickness  off,  And  rise  triumphant, 
triumph  through  decay.     Pau.  1  :  16.     C.  8. 
Triumph's,     there  my  triumph's  straw-fire  flared  and  funked. 

Fra  Lippo  4  :  77.     C.  343. 
Triumphs.       In   triumphs,  people  have   dropped   down  dead. 

Patriot  2  :  233.     C.  252. 
Trivial.     Why  write  of  trivial  matters,  things  of  price  Calling 

at  every  moment  for  remark  ?     Karshish  4  :  70.     C.  340. 
Troth.     Hands  and  feet  plighting  troth,  Yet  partners  enforced 

and  loth  !     Bad  D.  II.  6  :  395  ;  7  :  16.     C.  989. 

Trouble.     The  present  noise  and  trouble  have  retired  And  left 

the  eternal  past  to  rule  once  more.     Luria  2  :  368.     C.  302. 

trouble  has  come  on  me  Through  my  persistent  treading  in 

the  paths  Where  I  was  trained  to  go.     R.  and  B.  3  :145. 

C.  472. 

Troubles.     And  I   have    had  troubles   enough,  for  one.     Old 

Pict.2-Al.     cm. 
Troubled.     The  fact  is,  I  am  troubled  in  my  mind.  Beset  and 
pressed  hard  by  some  novel  thoughts.     R.  and  B.  3  :  199. 
C.  493. 
True.     To  have  to  do  with  nothing  but  the  true.  The  good,  the 
eternal  —  and  these,  not  alone  In  the  main  current  of  the 
general  life.  But  small  experiences  of  every  day.    R.  and  B. 
3 : 235.     C.  508. 
True  in  some  sense  or  other,  I  suppose.    Pippa  1  :  367.    C.  145. 
Yes,  my  end  of  breath  Shall  bear  away  my  soul  in  being  true  ! 

R.  and  B.  3  :  277.     C.  524. 
the  truths,  quite  true  if  stated  succinctly.  But  as  surely  false, 

in  their  quaint  presentment.     Chris.-Eve  4:6.     C.  318. 
He  said  true  things,  but  called  them  by  wrong  names.   Bishop 

B.  4  :  114.     C.  358. 
Least,  largest,  there 's  one  law  for  all  the  minds.  Here  or 

above  :  be  true  at  any  price  !     Prince  H.  4  :  364.     C.  695. 
make  it  plain  to  me.  Who,  bee-like,  sate  sense  with  the  simply 
true.     Ger  de  L.  6  :  346.     C.  971. 
Trump.     Blown  harshly,  keeps  the  trump  its  golden  cry  ?   Pict. 

Ig.  4  :  74.     C.  342. 
Trumpeting,     trumpeting  huge  wrongs  At  church  and  market- 
place, pillar  and  post,  Square's  corner,  street's  end.    R.  and 
B.3:U.     C.  431. 


260  TRUST  — TRUTH 

Trust.     It  is  onr  trust  That  there  is  yet  another  world  to  mend 
All  error  and  mischance.     Para.  1  :  84.     C.  34. 

Trust 's  politic,  suspicion  does  the  harm.  R.  and  B.  3  :  78. 
C.  445. 

Nothing  died  in  him  Save  courtesy,  good  sense  and  proper 
trust.     R.  and  B.  3  :  328.     C.  543. 

Though  love  fail,  I  can  trust  on  in  thy  pride.  A  ny  Wife  2  :  70. 
C.  188. 

I  trust  in  nature  for  the  stable  laws  Of  beauty  and  utility. 
Soul's  Tr.  2  :  343.     C.  291. 

I  trust  in  God  —  the  right  shall  be  the  right  And  other  than 
the  wrong,  while  he  endures.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  343.     C.  291. 

I  trust  in  my  own  soul,  that  can  perceive  The  outward  and 
the  inward,  nature's  good  And  God's.  Soul's  Tr.  2  :  343. 
C.  291. 

You  bid  me  be  courageous  and  trust  God  :  Do  you  in  turn 
dare  somewhat,  trust  and  \vrite.   it.  and  B.  3  :  266.    C.  520. 

for  I  trust  In  the  compensating  great  God.    R.  and  B.  3  :  270. 
C.  522. 
Trustful,    silly-sooth  And  too  much  trustful.    R.  and  B.  3  :  273. 

C.  523. 
Trusting.  There  is  but  one  way  to  browbeat  this  world.  Dumb- 
founder  doubt,  and  repay  scorn  in  kind,  —  To  go  on  trust- 
ing, namely,  till  faith  move  Mountains.  R.  and  B.  3  :  79. 
C.  445. 
Truth,  discern  Faintly  how  life  is  truth  and  truth  is  good. 
Pau.  1  :  22.     C.  10. 

I  discern  Faintly  immortal  life  and  truth  and  good.  Pau. 
1 :  22.* 

Truth  is  within  ourselves  ;  it  takes  no  rise  From  outward 
things,  whate'er  you  may  believe.     Para.  1  :  43.     C.  18. 

There  is  an  inmost  centre  in  us  all,  Where  truth  abides  in  ful- 
ness.    Para.  1  :  43.     C.  18. 

may  not  truth  be  lodged  alike  in  all.  The  lowest  as  the  high- 
est ?     Para.  1  :  44.     C.  19. 

life,  death,  light  and  shadow.  The  shows  of  the  world,  were 
bare  receptacles  Or  indices  of  truth  to  be  wrung  thence,  Not 
ministers  of  sorrow  or  delight.     Para.  1  :  49.     C.  21. 

simply  talk  Of  passion,  weakness  and  remorse  ;  in  short,  Any- 
thing but  the  naked  truth.     Para.  1  :  99.     C.  40. 

The  closelier  drew  he  round  him  his  array  Of  brilliance  to 
expel  the  truth.     Sor.  1 :  223.     C.  86. 

He  sees  truth,  and  his  lies  are  for  the  crowd  Who  cannot  see. 
Sor.  1  :  256.     C.  99. 

Up  in  the  midst  a  truth  grew,  without  speech.  Sor.  1  :  300. 
C.  117. 

Do  you  think  I  fear  to  speak  the  bare  truth  once  for  all  ? 
Pippa  1  :  335.     C.  132. 


I 


TRUTH  261 

Truth.     No  ;  straight  on  shall  I  go,  Truth  helping  ;  win  with  it 

or  die  with  it.     King  V.  1  :388.     C.  153. 
What  so  false   as  truth   is,  False  to  thee  ?     Where  the  ser- 
pent's tooth  is  Shun  the  tree.      Woman's  2  :  22.     C.  171. 
truth  at  blood-heat  and  falsehood  at  zero  rate.    Old  Pict.  2  :44. 

C.  178. 
Truth 's  golden  o'er  us  although  we  refuse  it.    Master  ff.  2  :  96. 

C.  197. 
Take   the   truth,  lady  —  you  are  made    for  truth  !     Colombe 

2  :  194.     C.  236. 
He  asked  the    truth  and  why  not  get  the  truth  ?     Colombe 

2  :  204.     C.  240. 
Truth,  for  truth  's  a  weighty  matter,  And  truth,  at  issue,  we 

can't  flatter  !      Waring  2  :"271.     C.  265. 
Were  't  not  for  God, .  .  .  what  hope  of  truth  —  Speaking  truth, 

—  hearing  truth,  would  stay  with  mau  ?     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  338. 

C.  289. 
Give  me  truth  —  truth,  power  to  speak  —  And  after  be  sole 

present  to  ajiprove  The  spoken  truth  !     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  338. 

C.  289. 
Truth  copied   falteriugly  from  copies   faint.     Luria    2  :  403. 

C.  315. 
Was  this  truth  of  force  ?     Able  to  take  its  own  part  as  truth 

should,  Sufficient,  self-sustaining  ?   R.  and  B.  3  :9.    C.  418. 
Truth   must   prevail,   the   proverb   vows.     R.  and  B.  3  :  10. 

C.  418. 
truth  —  Here  is  it  all  .  .  .  never  to  fall  nor  fade  Nor  be  for- 
gotten.    R.  and  B.  3  :  10.     C.  418. 
thence  bit  by  bit  I  dug  The  lingot  truth,  .  .  .  Assayed  and 

knew  my  piecemeal  gain  was  gold.   R.  and  B.  3  :  11.    C.  418. 
there  's  nothing  in  nor  out  o'  the  world   Good  except  truth. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  16.     C.  421. 
Lovers  of  dead  truth,  did  ye  fare  the  worse  ?     Lovers  of  live 

truth,  found  ye  false  my  tale  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  16.     C.  421. 
—  All  for  the  truth's  sake,  mere  truth,  nothing  else  !     R.  and 

B.  3  :  20.     C.  422. 
finger,  sent  to  find  and  fix  Truth  at  the  bottom,  that  deceptive 

speck.     R.  and  B.  3  :  20.     C.  422. 
She  woke,  saw,  sprang  upright  I'  the  midst  and  stood  as  ter- 
rible as  truth.     R.  and  B.  3  :  50.     C.  436. 
Whom  foes  and  friends  alike  avouch,  for  good  Or  ill,  a  man 

of  truth  whate'er  betide.     R.  and  B.  3  :  88.     C.  448. 
why  should  the  man  tell  truth  just  now  \\'hen  graceful  lying 

meets  such  ready  shrift  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  89.     C.  449. 
Truth  the  divinity  must  needs  descend  And  clear  things  at  the 

play's  fifth  act  —  aha  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  106.     C.  456. 
Such  naked  truth  while  chambered  in  the  brain  Shocks  nowise  : 

R.  and  B.  3:  in.     C.  461. 


262  TRUTH 

Truth,     time  to  make  the  truth  apparent,  truth  For  God's  sake, 

lest  men  should  believe  a  lie.     R.  and  B.  3  :  138.     C.  469. 
accident  I'  the  necessary  process,  —  just  a  trip  O'  the  torture- 
irons  in  their  search  for  truth.     R.  and  B.  3  :  188.     C.  489. 
Men,  You  must  know  that  a  man  gets  drunk  with  truth  Stag- 
nant inside  him  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  215.     C.  500. 
By  no  chance  but  because  God  willed  it  so  —  The  spark  of 

truth  was  struck  from  out  our  souls.     R.  and  B.  3  :  229. 

C.  506. 
I  thirst  for  truth,  But  shall  not  drink  it  till  I  reach  the  source. 

R.  and  B.  3  :23o.     C.  508. 
It  may  be  idle  or  inopportune,  But,  true  ?  —  why,  what  was 

all  I  said  but  truth.     R.  and  B.  3  :  264.     C.  519. 
'T  was  truth  singed  the  lies  And  saved  me,  not  the  vain  sword 

nor  weak  speech  !     J?,  and  B.  3  :  274.     C.  523. 
The  broad  brow  that  reverberates  the  truth.    R.  and  B.  3  :  277. 

C.  525. 
About  this  huge,  this  hurly-burly  case  :   He  wants  who  can 

excogitate  the  truth.     R.  and  B.  3  :  281.     C.  526. 
But  lo,  a  spirit-birth  conceived  of  flesh,  Truth  rare  and  real, 

not  transcripts.     R.  and  B.  3  :322.     C.  541. 
eliminate,  display,  make  triumph  truth  !     What  other  prize 

than   truth    were  worth    the  pains  ?      R.  and  B.  3  :  355. 

C.  553. 
all  that  I  do  and  am  Comes  from  the  truth,  or  seen  or  else 

surmised.   Remembered   or    divined,   as   mere   man   may. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  384.     C.  565. 
Or  only  truth  reverberate,  changed,  made  pass  A  spectrum 

into  mind,  the  narrow  eye.     R.  and  B.  3  :  387.     C.  566. 
—  as  truth  Easv  to  man  were  blindness  to  the  beast.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  387.     C.  566. 

since  no  lies  assist  !     Hear  the  truth,  you,  whatever  you  style 

yourselves.     R.  and  B.  3  :  414.     C.  576. 
Possibly  true,  probably  false,  a  truth  Such  as  all  truths  we 

Uveby.     R.  and  B.  3 -AoO.     C.  591. 
Let  who  gained  truth  the  dav  have  handsome  pride  In  his  own 

prowess  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  467.     C.  597. 
And,  since  truth  seems  reserved  for  heaven  not  earth.  Plagued 

here  by  earth's  prerogative  of  lies  —     R.  and  B.  3  :  471. 

C.  599. 

Truth  remains  true,  the  fault  's  in  the  prover.      Chris.-Eve 

4:6.     C.  318. 
The  license  and  the  limit,  space  and  bound.  Allowed  to  truth 

made  visible  in  man.     Pict.  Ig.  4  :  72.     C.  341. 
All  special-pleading  done  with  —  truth  is  truth,  And  justifies 

itself  by  undreamed  ways.     Bishop  B.  4  :  110.     C.  356. 
Truth  is  the  strong  thing.     Let  man's  life  be  true  !     In  a  B. 

4 : 136.     C.  366. 


I 


TRUTH  263 

Truth.     Truth  is  truth  :   too  true  it  was.      Gold  Hair  4  :  168. 

C.  378. 
truth  is  not  as  good  as  it  seems  !      Worst  4  :  172.     C.  379. 
God's  gift  was  that  man  should  conceive  of  truth  And  yearn 

to  gain  it,  catching  at  mistake,  As  midway  liclp.     Death  in 

Z).  4:204.     C.  391. 
Tliere  's   something  in  real  truth   (explain  who  can  !)    One 

casts  a  wistful  eye  at.     Sludge  4  :231.     C.  401. 
(Because  one  truth  leads  right  to  the  world's  end.)     Sludge 

4  :  234.     C.  403. 

Truth  questionless   though   unexplainable.       Sludge   4  :  250. 

C.  409. 
But  this  man  chose  truth  and  was  wiser  so.    Prince  H.  4  :  360. 

C.  693. 
Hear  the  truth,  and  bear  the  truth.  And  bring  the  truth  to 

bear  on  all  you  are  And  do.     Prince  H.  4  :  370.     C.  697. 
So  absolutely  good  is  truth,  truth  never  hurts  The  teller,  whose 

worst  crime  gets  somehow  grace,  avowed.    Fijine  4  :  394. 

C.  708. 
Cast  quite  The  vile  disguise  away,  try  truth  clean  opposite 

Such  creep-and-crawl.     Fijine  4  :  415.     C.  720. 
the  one  Truth,  that  ourselves  are  true  !    Fijine  4  :  420.    C.  723, 
Truth  builds  upon  the  sands,  Though  stationed  on  a  rock  : 

and   so  her  work  decays,  And  so  she  builds  afresh.     Fijine 

4:433.     C.  730. 
Truth   inside,    and  outside,  truth  also  ;    and   between   Each, 

falsehood  that  is  change.     Fijine  4  :  439.     C.  733. 
Truth  sets  aside   speech,  act,  time,  place,  indeed,  but  brings 

Nakedly  forward  now  the  principle  of  things  Highest  and 

least.     Fijine '^■Ai9.     C.  733. 
(Reversing  fable,  as  truth  can   and  will.)     Red    Cott.  5  :  10. 

C.  740. 
Why  with  old  truth   needs  new  truth  disagree  ?     Red   Cott. 

5  :  29.     C.  747. 

Truth  is  the  proper  policy  :  from  truth  —  Whate'er  the  force 

wherewith  you  fling  your  speech,  —  Be   sure  that  speech 

will   lift  vou,  by  rebound.  Somewhere  above   the  lowness 

of  a  lie  !  "Red  Cott.  5  :  36.     C.  750. 
Heaven,  earth  and  sea,  my  warrant  —  in  their  name.  Believe 

—  o'er   falsehood,   truth   is    surely  spliered.  O'er   vigliness 

beams  beauty,     yl  n.  ^ .  5  :  100.     C.  629. 
I  thought  there  might  be  truth  in  jest's  disguise.     Ari.  A. 

5  :  123.     C.  637. 
concede  me  truth  's  in  thing  not  word.  Meaning  not  manner  ! 

^n.^.  5:156.     C.  651. 
So  much  achieved  victorious  trutli  !     Ari.  A.  ^  :  160.     C.  652. 
What  man  of  full-grown  sense  and  sanity  Holds  other  than 

the  truth,     ^ri  .4.  5  :  169.     C.  656. 


264  TRUTH— TRUTH'S 

Truth.     Some  clear  thin  spirit-tlirust  of  lightning  —  truth  !   Ari. 

yl.  5:171.     C.  656. 
did  man's  truth  Subdue,  .  .  .  Its  rapier-edge  to  suit  the  bul- 
rush-spear Womanly  falsehood  fights  with  !     Nianpli.  5  :  350. 

C.  814. 
'T  is  Truth,  we  prize  !     Art 's  the  sole  question  in   debate  ! 

Fil.  Bald.  5  :  387.     C.  827. 
If  I  know  my  mood,  't  were   constant  —  come  in  wliatsoe'er 

uncouth  Shape  it  should,  nay,  formidable  —  so  the  answer 

were  but  truth.     La  S.  6  :  59.     C.  851. 
Truth  is  truth  howe'er  it  strike.     ia5.  6:61.     C.  852. 
But    truth,    truth,    that 's    the    gold !     Two    Poets    6 :  111. 

C.  872. 
Always  the  ingot  has   its  very  own  Value,  a  sparkle  struck 

from  truth  alone.     Two  Poets  6  :  111.     C.  872. 
Be  thy  last  word  —  truth  !     Joch.  6  :  212.     C.  918. 
Dost  thou   blame  A  soul  that  strives  but  to  see  plain,  speak 

true,  Truth  at  all  hazards  ?     Bean-St.  6  :  277.     C.  944. 
seek  Full  truth  my  soul  may,  when  some  babe,  I  saw  A  new- 
born   weakling,   starts    up    strong.     Ber.    de    M.  6  :  295. 

C.  952. 
Fire-suffused  through  and  through,   one  blaze  of  truth  Un- 

deadened  by  a  lie.     Chris.  Sm.  6  :  314.     C.  900. 
exquisite  disguise  Disguise-abjuriug,  truth  that  looks  like  lies. 

Geo.  B.  D.(j:?,2Q.     C.  964. 
—  Limn  truth  not  falsehood,  bid  us  love  alone  The  type  un- 

tampered  with,  the  naked  star  !     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  333.     C.  967. 
Truth    is  God  :    trample   lies    and    lies'  father,    God's   foe ! 

Fust  6  :  378.     C.  984. 
can   we   stav,  at   whatever   the   stage.   Truth   a-slide.      Fust 

6  :  378.     C.  984. 
truth  ablaze.  Not  falsehood's  fancy-haze  ?     Prol.  .4.6:  390  ; 

7:2.     C.  987. 
Truth   ever,  truth   only  the    excellent  !     Now  6  :  392  ;  7  : 7. 

C.  988. 
Truth,  that 's  brighter  than   gem.  Trust,   that 's  purer  than 

pearl.     Sum.  Bon.  6  :  393  ;  7  :  11.     C.  988. 
veil  is  rent  between  Me  and  the  truth  which  passed  Fitful, 

half-guessed,  half-seen.     Rev.  6  :  435  ;  7  :  103.     C.  1005. 
Truth's.     The  harvestings  of  truth's  stray  ears  Singly  gleaned, 

and  in  one    sheaf  Bound  together   for   belief.     Chris.-Eve 

4  :  14.     C.  321. 
Baring  truth's  face,  and  letting  drift  Her  veils  of  lies  as  they 

choose  to  shift  ?     Chris.-Eve  4  :  15.     C.  321. 
Truth's  atmosphere  mav  grow  mephitic  When  Papist  struggles 

with  Dissenter.     Chris.-Eve  4  :  21.     C.  323. 
But   I    trust    truth's    inherent   kingliness.     Ari.    A.    5:178. 

C.  659. 


TRUTH'S  —  TWILIGHT'S  2Qo 

Truth's,     clap  hands,  aud  hail   triumphant  Truth's  outbreak. 

Flfine  4  :  433.     C.  729. 
Truths.     —  All  bitter  truths  were  told  me,  all  at  once,  To  end 

the  sooner.     Kinc/  V.  1  :  371.     C.  146. 
As   for  adding  to  the  original  stock  of   truths,  —  impossible  ! 

SouVs  Tr.  2  :  3.54.     C.  296. 
Out  of  the  fragmentary  truths  where  light  Lay  fitful  in  a  tene- 

brific  time  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  395.     C.  569. 
how  small  truths  suppressed  Conduce  to  the  far  greater  truth's 

display —     Ari.  A.  5  :  165.     C.  654. 
robed  and  crowned  As  truths  confirmed  by  falsehood  all  aud 

each  —     Joch.  6  :  226.     C.  924. 
Truths  in  their  primal  clarity.     Joch.  6  :  232.     C.  927. 
Truthfulness.     Truthfulness   might   prove  policy  as  good  As 

guile.     King  C.  1  :  412.     C.  162. 
Tulip,     tulip,  .  .  .  blows   out   its   great   red   bell  Like  a  thin 

clear  bubble  of  blood.     Up  —  Down  2  :  33.     C.  174. 
Tunfe.     'Gainst  whom  the  cry  went,  like  a  frowsy  tune.  Tick- 
ling men's  ears —     R.  and  B.  3:8.     C.  417. 
just  as  an  old-world  tune  Wears  out  aud  drops  away.     Chas. 

yl.  6:362.     C.  978. 
Turn.     You  have  had  your  turn  and  spoken  your  home-truths  : 

The  hand  's  mine  now,  and  here  you  follow  suit.     Bishop  B. 

4  :  92.     C.  349. 
—  despond,  despair,  And  then,  hey,  presto,  there  's  a  turn  o' 

the  wheel.  Under  comes  uppermost,  fate  makes  full  amends. 

Sludc/e  4  :  251.     C.  410. 
Turns.     He  turns  aud  tries  and  snuffs  and  savors  it,  As  some 

old   fly    the   sugar-grain,   your   gift.     R.   and   B.   3 :  442. 

C.  588. 
Turned.     One  who  never  turned  his  back  but  marched  breast 

forward,   Never   doubted   clouds    would  break.      Epil.  A. 

6  :  440  ;  7  :  113.     C.  1007. 
Turpitude.     See,  if  the   very  turpitude   bemoaned  Prove  not 

mere    excellence    the    fool    ignores  !     R.    and   B.   3 :  452. 

C.  592. 
Turquoise.     Nishapur,  that  Elburz  looks  above  —  Where  they 

dig  turquoise.     Melon.  6  :  242.     C.  930. 
Twenty.     Twentv  vears  are  good  gain,  come  what  come  will  ! 

Prmce /f.  4:379.     C.  700. 
Twilight,     the  glimmer  of  twilight,  Never  glad  confident  morn- 
ing again  !     Lost  Z.  2  : 4.     C.  164. 
AVhen  the  twilight  helps  to  fuse  The  first  fresh  with  the  faded 

hues.     Flight  2  :  304.     C.  277. 
darkened   round   By  the   mid  -  March   twilight.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  199.     C.  494. 

Tw^ilight's.     twilight's  hungry  jaw,  which  champs  fine.     Fijine 

4  :  436.     C.  731. 


266  TWO  —  UNFORESEEN 

Two.     Two  souls  in  one  were  formidable  odds.     Balau.  4  :  327. 

C.  027. 
Tyranny.     Tj-ranny  wakes  rebellion  from  its  sleep.     Rebellion, 

say  I?  — rather,  self-defence.     R.  and  B. 'd  ■.'i'l'd.     C.  544. 
Tyrants.     —  Tyrants,  he  braved  them,  —  patriots,   he    saved 

them  —  "  Westminster's  Pym  !  "    Chas.A.  6  :  3G4.     C.  978. 


u 

"Ultima  Thule.     — to  Ultima  Thule,  say.  Or  Proxima  Civitas, 

what 's  the  odds  of  name  And  place  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  171. 

C.  482. 
Unamerced.     Speak,  Power,  the  charm  !     Keep  the  life  there 

uuamerced  Bv  chance,  change,  death's  alarm  !    Rev.  6  :  437  ; 

7 : 108.     C.  1006. 
TJuashamed.     Let  us  be  unashamed  of  soul.     Two  in  C.  2  :  72. 

C.  189. 
Unbelief.     In  each  of  you,  purest  unbelief  may  prompt.  And  wit 

explain  to  who  has  eyes  to  see.     R.  and  B.  3  :417.      C.  578. 
All  we  have  gained  then  by  our  unbelief  Is  a  life  of  doubt  di- 
versified by  faith.     Bishop  B.  4  :  96.     C.  351. 
honest  zeal  to  stop  the  voice  Of  unbelief  with  stone-throw. 

Fil.  Bald,  o -.ZIG.     C.  824. 
Uublacken.     Will  anv  speck  of  white  unblacken  life  Splashed, 

splotched,  dyed  hell-deep  —     Bean-St.  6  :  274.     C.  943. 
Understand.     You  will  wake,  and  remember,  and  understand. 

Evelyn  2  :  25.     C.  171. 
Since  Man  may  claim  a  right  to  understand  What  passes  un- 
derstanding.    Ber.  de  M.  6  :  298.     C.  953. 
Understands.     Reads  verse  and  thinks  she  understands.     Dls 

Al.i:  174.     C.  379. 
Understanding,     the  other  kind  of  kingship,  that  consists  in 

understanding   better   than   his    fellows    this   and    similar 

points  of  human  nature.     SouFs  Tr.  2  :350.     C.  295. 
Understood.     Where  all  is  glorious  rightly  understood.     Ari. 

A.  5: 165.     C.  654. 
Undertaken,     undertaken  in  God's  face  With   all  these  lies 

.  .  .  For  end  so  other  than  man's  end.     R.  and  B.  3  :  369. 

C.  558. 
Undone.     Could  we  by  a  wish  Have  what  we  vnll  and  get  the 

future  now.  Would  we  wish  aught  done  undone  in  the  past  ? 

R.  and  B.  3  :  278.     C.  525. 
Unexpectedness.     Unexpectedness  enhances  What  your  ear's 

auxiliar  —  Fancy  —  finds     suggestive.      Flute-M.    6  :  422  ; 

7  :  76.     C.  1000." 
Unforeseen.     Safer  I  worked  the  new,  the  unforeseen,  The  nice 

by-stroke.     R.  and  B.  3  :285.     C.  527. 


!l 


UNFORESEEN  — UNSEEN  267 

Unforeseen,      the   strange   Peculiar  unforeseen   new  circum- 
stance.    R.  and  B.  3  :  298.     C.  532. 
Unfortunate.     He  's  not  of  those  who  care  the  more  for  men 

That  they  're  unfortunate.     Straf.  1:  154.     C.  59. 
Unfulfilled.     Each   life   unfulfilled,  you   see  ;    It   hangs   still, 

patchy  and  scrappy.      Youth  and  A.  4  :  219.     C.  390. 
Universe.     O'erturn  the  hinges  of  the  universe.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  292.     C.  530. 
Unjust.     — Oh,  so  all  unjust  —  the  less   deserved,  the    more 

divine  ?     Epil.  Melon.  G  :  242.     C.  930. 
Unkiudness.     Like  a  dead  friend  safe  from  unkindness  more  ! 

Para.  1:84.     C.  34. 
Unknown  God.    Had  you,  while,  say,  lawsuiting  foe  to  death, 

But  raised  an  altar  to  the  Unknown  God.     R.  and  B.  3  :  448. 

C.  590. 
UnknoAving.     There 's  no  unknowing  what  one  knows.     Inn 

yl.  5:298.     C.  795. 
Unmanly.     The  ignoble  noble,  the  unmanly  man,  The  beast 

below  the  beast  in  brutishness  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  97.     C.  452. 
—  The    unmanly   men,   no    woman-mother    made,   Spawned 

somehow  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  223.     C.  503. 
Unmotherly.     Unmotherly  mother  and   unwomanly  Woman, 

that  near  turns  motherhood  to  shame.     R.  and  B.  3  :  376. 

C.  561. 
Unpoetlike.     if  he  saves  his  cash,  unpoetlike,  Loves  wine  and 

—  never  mind  what  other  sport.     Ari.  A.  5  :  159.     C.  652. 
Unpoisoned.     Doctored  and  drenched,  somewhat  unpoisoned 

so.     R.  and  B.  3  :  165.     C.  480. 
Unravelled.     Soon  shall  things  be  unperplexed  And  the  right 

and  wrong,  now  tangled,  lie  unravelled  in  the  next.     La  S. 

6  :  70.     C.  856. 
Unread,     took  on  trust  the  unread  sense  which,  read,  And  re- 
cognized were  to  be  spurned  at  once.     R.  and  B.  3  :  338. 

C.  547. 
Unrealized.     For   what  is  an   idea   unrealized  ?      R.  and  B. 

3  :  389.     C.  567. 
Unreasonableness.     And  pity   is  so  near  to  love,  and   love 

So  neighborly  to  all  unreasonableness  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  337. 

C.  547. 
Unrepaid.     With  her  beauteous  vain  endeavor  And  goodness 

unrepaid  as  ever.      Waring  3  :  271.     C.  265. 
Unripe.      scant     Scurvy     unripe    existence  —  wilding    grapes 

Grass-green  and  sorrel-sour.     Joch.  6  :  229.     C.  926. 
Unseemliness.     You   ridded   your   eve    of   my  unseemliness. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  184.     C.  487. 
Unseen.     No,  at   noonday  in  the  bustle  of   man's   work-time 

Greet  the  unseen  with  a  cheer  !     Epil.  A.  Q:  440  ;  7  :  114. 

C.  1007. 


2G8  UNSOCIABLE  — VALE 

Unsociable.    The  most  unsociable  of  poet-kind.    Balau.  4 :  270. 

C.  ()05. 
Unspilled.     Only  grant  my  soul  may  carry  liigh  through  death 

her  cup  unspilled.     La  S.  G  :  06.     C.  855. 
Unspoken.     Wish   no   word  unspoken,   want   no   look  away  ! 

Epil.  Melon.  6  :  242.     C.  930. 
Unspotted.     He   kept   life-long   unspotted   from   the   world ! 

R.  and  B.  3  :  447.     C.  590. 
Unstrangled.     My  face  the  sole  unstrangled  part  of  me,  —  I 

must  have  this  new  gad-ily  in  that  face.     R.  and  B.  3  :  163. 

C.  479. 
Unsuccess.     For  unsuccess,  explain  it  how  you  will.  Disquali- 
fies  you,  makes  you  doubt  yourself.      R.  and  B.  3  :  444. 

C.  589. 
Unthinkable.     Unthinkable,   unknowable   to   niau.      Bean-St. 

6  :  280.     C.  945. 
Untinieliness.     So  much  for  the  untimeliness  of  death  !     R. 

and  B.  3  :  455.     C.  593. 
Untransfigured.     off  fell  The  flame-robe,  and  the  untransfig- 

ured  man  Resumed  sobriety.     Chris.  Sm.  6  :  314.     C.  959. 
Untwists,     untwists  heaven's  white  from  the  yellow  flare  O' 

the  world's  gross  torch,  without  night's  foil.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  396.     C.  569. 
Un'worthiness.     —  sense   of   his   unworthiness  Turning  each 

eye  up  to  the  inmost  white  —  With  long-drawn  sigh.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  344.     C.  549. 
Unvrorthily.     ne'er  again  Walk  earth  unworthily  as  hereto- 
fore.    Red  Cott.  5  :  58.     C.  758. 
Up.     Look  not  thou  down  but  up  !     Ben  Ezra  4  :  190.     C.  385. 
To  look  at,  or  look  through,  or  look  —  for  aught  I  care  — 

Over  :  if  only  up,  it  is,  not  down.     Fifine  4  :  432.     C.  729. 
Usages,     usages  thoroughly  worn-out,  The  souls  of  them  fumed- 

forth,  the  hearts  of  them  torn-out.     Flight  2  :  291.     C.  272. 
Utterance.     I  fought  her  to  the  utterance,  I  fell.    Straf,  1: 189. 

C.  73. 


Vain.     Let  others  climb  the   heights  o'  the  court,  the  camp  ! 
How  vain   are   chambering   and  wantonness.     R.   and  B. 
3  :  280.     C.  525. 
so  far  from  realizing  gain,  Each  step  aside  just  proves  diver- 
gency in  vain.     Fifine  4  :  441.     C.  734. 

Vainly.     Vainly  I  left  my  angel-sphere.  Vain  was  thy  dream 
of  many  a  year.     Boy  and  Ang.  2  :  240.     C.  254. 

Vale.     Do  I  view  the  world  as  a  vale  of  tears  ?  Ah,  reverend 
sir,  not  I !     Confessions  4  :  214.     C.  394. 


VALLEY  — VERSE  269 

Valley,     each  vallev,  kissed  To  sudden  life,  lay  silver-bright. 

Pan  6  :  188.     C"  909. 
Valor.     Could  valor  save  a  town,  Troy  still  had  stood.    R.  and 

i.'.  3:339.     C.  547. 
Valueless.     As  life  wanes,  all  its  care  ar.d  strife  and  toil  Seem 

strangely  valueless.     Pau.  1:4.     C.  3. 
Vanity,     't  was  mere  vanity.  Not  love,  set  that  task  to  human- 
ity !     Glove  2  :  249.     C.  257. 
the  man's   slow  conviction  '  Vanity  Of  vanities  —  alike   my 

griefs  and  joys  !  '     Joch.  6  :  231.     C.  926. 
Varech.     the  varech  limit-line,  Burnt  cinder-black,  with  brown 

uncrumpled  swathe  Of   berried  softness.     Red  Cutt.   5  : 2. 

C.  737. 
Veil.     Another  wrappage,  namely  one  thick  veil  That  hid  her, 

matron-wise,  from  head  to  foot.     R.  and  B.  3  :  78.     C.  444. 
Vender,     as  the  vender  knows  the  money-worth  Of  his  Greek 

statue,  fools  aspire  to  buy.     Inn  A.  5  :277.     C.  787. 
Venetian.     Venetian  visitor  at  Rome,  —  who  knows,  On  what 

pretence  of  busy  idleness  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  458.     C.  594. 
Vengeance.      Vengeance,  .  .  .  burst,    like    a   mountain-wave 

That   holds  a   monster  in  it,  over  the   house.     R.  and  B. 

3:65.     C.  440. 
practicing,    'tis   said,  Immitigably  from   the  very  first,  The 

finer  vengeance.     R.  and  B.  3  :  123.     C.  463. 
Venice.     Venice  seems  a  type  Of  Life  —  'twixt  blue  and  blue 

extends,  a  stripe.     Sor.  1  :  254.     C.  99. 
Dust  and  ashes,  dead  and  done  with,  Venice  spent  what  Ven- 
ice earned.      Toccata  2  :  36.     C.  175. 
Venice  ?   She  it  was,  by  instinct  found  Carnival-country  pro- 
per.    Fifine  4  :  426.     C.  726. 
Venice  and  London  —  London  's  '  Death  the  bony'  Compared 

with  Life  —  that's  Venice  !     R.  Brown  C.  947. 
Venus.   Ask  the  Church  Why  she  was  wont  to  turn  each  Venus 

here,  — .  .  .  Into   Madonna's    shape.     R.   and   B.    3:381. 

C.  563. 
Veracity,     veracity  —  That 's  honest  solid  earth  —  and    false- 
hood, theft  And  air,  that 's  one  illusive  emptiness  !     /«n  A. 

5  :  295.     C.  794. 
Verdict.     Eventual  verdict  of  the  curious  few  Who  care  to  sift 

a  business  to  tlie  bran.     R.  and  B.  3  :  21.     C.  423. 
Verge.    At  the  horizontal  line,  creation's  verge,  From  what  just 

is  to  absolute  nothingness.     R.  and  B.  3  :  232.     C.  507. 
Verse.     So,  I  will  sing  on  fast  as  fancies  come ;  Rudely,  the 

verse  being  as  the  mood  it  paints.     Pau.  1:7.     C  4. 
Thy  rare  gold  ring  of  verse  (the  poet  praised)  Linking  our 

England  to  his  Italy  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  477.     C.  601. 
then   verse.  Fining   to   music,  shall   asperse    Fresh  fire-dew. 

Eas.-Day  4  :  52.     C.  334. 


270  VERSE  —  VIOLETS 

Verse.     Verse  and  nothing  else  have  I  to  give  you.     One  Word 

4  :  127.    C.  363. 

the  verse  slips  oily-bathed  In  unctuous  music  —  say,  effem- 
inate.    An.  A.o:  150.     C.  648. 
verse  falls  thick  and  fast,  Sonnets  and  songs  of  every  size  and 

shape.     Two  Poets  6  :  99.     C.  868. 
So  I  said  "  To  do  little  is  bad,  to  do  nothing  is  worse  "  —  And 
made  verse.     Epil.  Cher.  6  :  265.     C.  939. 
Vestals.    (Pontifex  Maximus  whipped  Vestals  once.)    R.  and  B. 

3  :  60.     C.  438. 
Vexed.     Was  it  something  said,  Something  done,  Vexed  him  ? 

In  a  Year  2  :  82.     C.  192. 
Vicar-upon-earth.     injustice   done  by  God   In  person  of  his 

Vicar-upon-earth.     Cenciaja  5  :  369.     C.  821. 
Vice,     quick  squeeze  Vice  like  a  biting  spirit  from  the  lees  Of 
life  !     Sor.  1  :  314.     C.  123. 
Vice   prostrate,   virtue  pedestalled   at  last,  The  triumph   of 

truth  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  57.     C.  436. 
Vice,  .  .  .  Virtue  .  .  .  Man 's  made  of  both  :  and  both  must 
be  of  use  To  somebody.     Ari.  A.  5  :227.     C.  675. 
Victor,     how  otherwise  had  come  to  pass  That  Victor  rules, 

this  present  year,  in  Rome  ?     Cenciaja  5  :  375.     C.  823. 
Victrix.     the  Idalian  shape,   The  undeposed,  erectly   Victrix 

still !     Red  Cott.  5  :  26.     C.  746. 
Vile.     For  I  find  this  black  mark  impinge  the  man.  That  he  be- 
lieves in  just  the  vile  of  life.     R.  and  B.  3  :  367.     C.  558. 
They  cast  their  lot  perversely  in  with  low  And  vile.     Ari.  A. 

5  :  155.     C.  650. 

Villa,     a   certain   villa   smothered   up  in  vines  At  the  town's 

edge  .  .  .  Out  of  eye-reach,  out  of  ear-shot.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  172.     C.  483. 
Vindication,     any  proof  that  truth  May  look  for  vindication 

from  the  world.     R.  and  B.  3  :  468.     C.  598. 
Vines.     How  the  vines  writhe  in   rows,  each  impaled  on  its 

stake  !     /.  Lee  4  :  155.     C.  373. 
Vineyard.     IMan's  thoughts  and  loves  and  hates  !    Earth  is  my 

vineyard,  these  grew  there.     Epil.  Pacch.  5  :  392.     C.  829. 
Violence.     Must  violence  still  bring  peace  forth  ?     Soul's  Tr. 

2  :  339.     C.  290. 
Violence,  made  safe  and  sure  by  craft.     R.  and  B.  3  :  309. 

C.  558. 
Violet.     You  '11  look  at  least  on  love's  remains,  A  grave's  one 

violet :     Pippa  1  :  360.     C.  142. 
Violets,     the  banks  Had  violets  opening  from  sleep  like  eyes. 

Pau.  1:3.     C.  3. 
Such  a  starved  bank  of  moss  Till,  that  May-morn,  Blue  ran 

the  flash  across  :    Violets  were  born  !     Two  Poets  6  :  77. 

C.  859. 


VIRGIL  — VOICE  271 

Virgil.  Virgil  is  little  help  to  who  writes  prose.  He  shall 
attack  me  Terence  with  the  dawn.  R.  and  B.  3 :  282. 
C.  526. 

Virgil's.  —  yonr  frigid  Virgil's  fieriest  word  —  R.  and  B. 
3:446.     C  589. 

Virgin.  Virgin  as  oval  tawny  pendent  tear  At  beehive-edge 
when  ripened  combs  o'ertlow,  —     R.  and  £.3:1.      C.  414. 

Virginity.  Virginity,  —  't  is  virtne  or  't  is  vice.  R.  and  B. 
3:254.     C.  515. 

Virtue.     Wait  not  for  the  late  savor,  leave  untried  Virtue,  the 
creaming  honey-wine.     Sor.  1  :  314.     C.  123. 
Well-famed  and  widely-instanced  as  that  crown  To  the  hus- 
band, virtue  in  a  woman's  shape.    R.  arid  B.  3  :46.     C.  4.32. 
Such  virtue  is  scarce  natural  to  your  age.     R.  and  B.  3  :  201. 

C.  494. 
But  virtue,  barred,  still  leaps  the  barrier,  lords  !  —  Still,  moon- 
like, penetrates  the  encroaching  mist.     R.  and  B.  3 :  340. 
C.  548. 
—  if  in  right  returned  For  wrong,  most  pardon  for  worst  in- 
jury, If  there  be  any  virtue.     R.  and  B.  3  :  379.     C.  562. 
and  trust  To  the  naked  virtue  :  it  was  virtue  stood  Unarmed 

and  awed  me.     R.  and  B.  3  :  415.     C.  577. 
relic  of  the  past,  When  Virtue  laughingly  told  truth  to  Vice, 
Uncensured.     Ari.  A.  5: 108.     C.  632. 

Visage,  permits  His  visage  to  repair  the  natural  bland  Econ- 
omy.    5ours  Tr.  2:342.     C.  291. 

Vishnu-land.  In  Vishnu-land  what  Avatar  ?  Waring  2  :  275. 
C.  266. 

Vision.  There  is  a  vision  in  the  heart  of  each  Of  justice,  mercy, 
wisdom,  tenderness.     Colombe  2  :  197.     C.  237. 

Visitant,  no  rare  visitant  On  nights  and  days  whither  safe 
harbor  lured.     R.  and  B.  3  :104.     C.  455. 

Visitor's.  tap  discreet,  A  visitor's  premonitory  cough.  And 
poverty  had  reached  him  in  her  rounds.  R.  and  B.  3  :  39. 
C.  429. 

Viterbo.  Viterbo  owns  no  equal,  says  The  by-word,  for  fair 
women.     Bea.  Sig.  6  :  415  ;  7  :  63.     C.  997. 

Vittiano.  Vittiano,  nor  unpleasant  with  its  vines.  R.  and  B. 
3  :  75.     C.  443. 

Vivisection.  By  vivisection,  at  expense  Of  half-an-hour  and 
eighteenpence.  How  brain  secretes  dog's  soul,  we  'II  see  ! 
Tray  6  :  143.     C.  887. 

Voice.    Your  clear  voice  Vibrates  too  like  a  harp-string.    Para. 
1  :  107.     C.  43. 
a  voice  less  loud,  through  its  joys  and  fears.  Than  the  two 

hearts  beating  each  to  each  !     Meeting  2  :21.     C.  170. 
a  voice  (Sweeter  far  than  bv  harp  or  by  psaltery  Is  breathed.) 
Pied  Piper  2  •.2%b.     C.  269. 


272  VOICE  — WAIT 

Voice,     voice  that  greatens  when  there  's  need  to  curse.    Soul's 
Tr.  2  :  340.     C.  290. 
The    Roman   voice   was   potent,  plentiful.     R.  and  B.  3:6. 

C.  416. 
That  erect  form,  flashing  brow,  fiilgurant  eve,  That  voice  im- 
mortd  (oh,  that  voice  of  hers  !)    R.  and  ^B.  3  :  224.    C.  504. 
a   voice  other   than  yours  Quickens   my   spirit.     R.  and  B. 

3:402.     C.  572. 
The  good  girl  with  the  velvet  in  her  voice.    R.  and  B.  3  :  408. 

C.  574. 
And  the  low  voice  my  soul  hears,  as  a  bird  The  fowler's  pipe, 
and  follows  to  the  snare.     Andrea  4: -.So.     C.  347. 
Voiceless.     Then  niv  davs  spoke  not,  and  my  nights  of  fire 

Were  voiceless  ?  ~  Soul's  Tr.  2  :  340.     C.  290. 
Volcano's,      the  volcano's  vapor-flag,   winds  hoist  Black  o'er 

the  spread  of  sea.     Sor.  1  :  318.     C.  124. 
Voltaire.     Terrible  Pope,  too,  of  a  kind,  —  Voltaire.     R.  and 
£.3:475.     C.  600. 
Voltaire  ?  .  .  .  Old    sciolist,   whom    only   boys   think   sage. 

Red  Cott.  o -.31.     C.  748. 
Replaced  by  brand-new  bright   ones  :  Arouet,  For  instance, 
grew  Voltaire  ;    Desf orges  —  Malcrais.      Two  Poets  6  :  99. 
C.  867. 
Vomit.     It  's  truth  !     I  somehow  vomit  truth  to-day.     Sludge 

4 : 240.     C.  405. 
VoTW.     the  vow,  No  morrow's  sun  should   arise  and  set  And 
leave  them  then  as  it  left  them  now.     Stat,  and  B.  2  :  325. 
C.  285. 
I  stopped  short  awe-struck.     How  shall  holiest  flesh  Engage 
to  keep  such  vow  inviolate.     R.  and  B.  3  :  195.     C.  492. 
Vows.     Vows  —  words,  no  angel  set  down,  some  elf  Mistook, 

—  for  an  oath,  an  epigram  !     Worst  4  :  170.     C.  378. 
Vulgar,     give  In  blood  and  brain,  in  house  and  land  and  cash, 
Not  get  and  gamer  as  the  vulgar  may.     R.  and  B.  3  :  146. 
C.  472. 
(Quite  away  from  aught  vulgar  and  extern.)      it.  and  B. 
3 : 322.     C.  541. 
Vulcan.     Vulcan  pursuing  Mars,  as  poets  sing,  —     R.  and  B. 
3  :  221.     C.  502. 


W 

"Wagner's.  That  music  in  his  day  as  much  absorbed  Heart 
and  soul  then  as  Wagner's  music  now.  Chas.  A.  6:357. 
C.  976. 

Wait.  Wait  For  some  transcendent  life  reserved  by  Fate  To 
follow  this  ?     Sor.  1  :  315.     C.  123. 


WAIT  — WARE  273 

Wait.     But  next  day  passed,  and  next  day  yet,  With  still  fresh 
cause  to  wait.     Stat,  and  B.  2  :  325.     C.  285. 
If  we  could  wait  !     The  only  fault 's  with  time ;  All  men  be- 
come good  creatures  :  but  so  slow  !    Luria  2  :  400.     C.  314. 
Getting   fast   tired  o'  the  game    whose   word  is  — "  Wait !  " 

R.  and  B.  3  :  115.     C.  459. 
So,  let  him  wait  God's  instant  men   call   years  ;  Meantime 
hold  hard  by  truth  and  his  great  soul.     R.  and  B.  3  :  278. 
C.  525. 
"Waited.     He  waited  and  learned  waiting,  thirty  years.     R.  and 
£.  3  :  40.     C.  430. 
Waited  a  whole  and  indecorous  week !      R.  and  B.  3  :  303. 
C.  534. 
Waiting.     Waste  not  thy  gifts   In  profitless  waiting  for  the 
gods'  descent.     Para.  1  :  39.     C.  17. 
—  since  all  waiting 's  weary  work.     Inn  A.  5  : 299.     C.  795. 
Wake.     We  wake  at   length  from  weary  dreams  ;  but  both 

Have  slept  in  fairy-land.     Para.  1  :  60.     C.  25. 
Walk.     Did  you  walk  hither,  jog  it  by  the  plain.  Or  jaunt  it  by 
the  highway,  braving  bruise  —     Red  Cott.  5:3.     C.  737. 
"Walk,"  come  what  come  may.  No  measurer  of  steps  on  this 
our  globe  Shall  ever  match  for  marvels.     Ger.  de  L.6  :  344. 
C.  971. 
Walking,     walking   misery  away  O'  the   mountain-side   with 
dog  aud  gun  belike.     R.  and  B.  3  :  173.     C.  483. 
Walking  slow  to  beating  bosom  surest  solace  soonest  gives. 
La  S.Q:  67.     C.  855. 
Wanderers.     God,  by  God's  own  ways  occult,  May  —  doth,  I 
will  believe  —  bring  back  All  wanderers  to  a  single  track. 
Chris.-Eve  4  :  27.     C.  325. 
Wanness.     Some  wanness  where,  I  think,  thy  foot  may  fall  ! 

R.  and  B.  ^ -.^2.     C.  427. 
Want.     I  know  both  what  I  want  and  what  might  gain,  And 
yet  how  profitless  to  know.     Andrea  4  :85.     C.  346. 
I  woi'ked  because  I  want  you  with  my  soul :  I  therefore  ask 
your  hand.     In  a  B.4::  135.     C.  365. 
Wants.     Mankind   i'  the   main   have   little   wants,  not    large. 

Prince  H.  4  :  354.     C.  691. 
Wanting.     Wanting  is  —  what  ?      Wanting  6  :  193.     C.  911. 
War.     Our  wearisome  pedantic  art  of  war.  By  which  we  prove 
retreat  may  be  success.     Luria  2  :  367.     C.  301. 
war  worsens  all  things.     Ari.  A.  5  :  116.     C.  635. 
Moreover  there  is  blessing  in  the  curse  Peace-praisers  call 
war.     JocA.  6:221.     C.  922. 
War's,     blood,  tears,  all  war's  wof  ul  consequence.     Jock.  6  :  222. 

C.  923. 
"Ware.     Are  flesh    and  blood  a  ware  ?     Are  heart  and  soul  a 
chattel  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  152.     C.  475. 


274  WARILY—  WEAK 

Warily.  Plant  tlie  foot  warily,  accept  a  staff,  Stamp  only 
where  you  probe  the  standiug-poiut.  Red  Cott.  5  :  27. 
C.  746. 

Waring.  What 's  become  of  Wariug  ?  Waring  2  :  269. 
C.  264. 

Warned,     warned  the  weak  one  in  such  tender  words.     Para. 

1  :  67.     C.  27. 

Warning.  Enough  that  I  'm  a  warning,  as  I  writhe,  To  all 
and  each  my  fellows  of  the  file.     R.  and  B.  3  :  406.     C.  573. 

Was.  Not  only  how  all  was  and  must  have  been,  But  can- 
not other  than  be  to  the  end  of  time.  R.  and  B.  3  :  37. 
C.  429. 

Waste.  Be  sure  that  God  Ne'er  dooms  to  waste  the  strength 
he  deigns  impart !     Para.  1  :  35.     C.  15. 

Watch.  Watch  out  thy  watch,  let  weak  ones  doze  and  dream  ! 
A  ny  Wife  2  :  69.     C.  188. 

Watcher.  I  am  a  watcher  whose  eyes  have  grown  dim  Witli 
looking  for  some  star  which  breaks  on  him  Altered  and 
worn  and  weak  and  full  of  tears.     Pau.  1:6.     C.  4. 

Water.    Water  is  beautiful,  but  not  like  air.    Paw.  1:19.     C.  9. 
Up  to  the  height  O'er  the  wan  water.     Just  a  vow  to  read. 

R.andB.^-.l^b.     C.  492. 
Tastes  sweet  the  water  with  such  specks  of  earth  ?     Pict.  Ig. 

4  :  74.     C.  342. 
The  water  's  in  stripes  like  a  snake,  olive-pale  To  the  lee- 
ward, —    /.  Lee  4  :  155.     C.  373. 

Water-tree,  fountains  Growing  up  eternally  Each  to  a  musi- 
cal water-tree.     Chris.-Eve  4  :  13.     C.  320. 

Watery.  A  breadth  of  watery  heaven  like  a  bay,  A  sky-like 
space  of  water,  ray  for  ray.     Sor.  1  :  307.     C.  120. 

Wave,     the  wave  protrudes  a  lip  at  last,  And  flecks  my  foot 
with  froth,  nor  tempts  in  vain.     Red  Cott.  5:2.     C.  737. 
thy  glaucous  wave  Glassing  that  marbled  last  magnificence. 

.4ri.  ^.5:99.     C.  628. 
wave  broke  and  overswarmed,  and  sucked  To  bounds  back, 

multitudinously  ceased.     Ari.  A.  5  :9d.     C.  628. 
Ray  fused  with   wave,   to   never   disunite.     Ari.   A.   5 :  116. 
C.  635. 

Waves,  you  waves  —  Some  forthright,  some  describe  a  sinu- 
ous track.  Some,  crested  brilliantly.  R.  and  B.  3  :  455. 
C.  593. 

Way.  If  it  was  ever  worth  your  while  to  come,  Was  not  the 
proper  way  worth  finding  too.     Colombe  2  :  188.     C.  234. 

Weak,      the   strong  should   help  the    weak  :  You  know  how 

weak  the  strongest  women  are.     R.  and  B.  3  :  207.     C.  497. 

We  are  so  weak,  we  know  our  motives  least  In  their  confused 

beginning.     Para.  1  :  107.     C.  43. 
Man's   heart   is  weak,    And   its    temptations    many.     Luria 

2  :  384.     C.  308. 


WEAK  — WEED  275 

Weak,     we  poor  Weak  souls,  Low  we  endeavor  to  be  strong  ! 

R.  and  B.  3  :  27G.     C.  524. 
"Weaker.     Prepare  to  find  that,  lamb-like,  she  too  frisks  —  O' 
the   weaker   sex,  my  lords,  the  weaker  sex  !     it.  and  B. 
3  :  325.     C.  542. 
Weakling.     What   of   the  weakling,  the    ignorant  criminal  ? 

Ixion  6  :  209.     C.  917. 
Weakness.     The  weakness  yon  reveal  endears  you  more,  Like 
the  far  traces  of  decay  in  suns.     Para.  1  :81.     C.  33. 
one  can  ne'er  keep  down  Our  foolish  nature's  weakness.     Para. 

1:87.     C.  35. 
A  weakness,  but  most  precious,  —  like  a  flaw  I'  the  diamond. 

Straf.  1  :  155.     C.  59. 
Learnt  how  to  live  in  weakness  as  in  strength.     Sor.  1  :  222. 

C.  86. 
Yet  'ware,  the  while,  how  weakness  mars  the  print  And  makes 
confusion,  leaves  the    thing   men   see.     it.  and  B.  3 :  271. 
C.  522. 
And  that  which   men    think  weakness  within   strength,  But 
angels   know  for  strength  and   stronger  yet.     R.   and   B. 
3 : 392.     C.  568. 
how  weakness   strove  to  hide  itself,  In  bluster  against  weak- 
ness.    Balau.  4  :  298.     C.  616. 
Weakness  never  needs  be  falseness  :  truth  is  truth  in  each 

degree.     La  S.Q:  59.     C.  851. 
on  his  death-bed,  weakness  played  the  thief  With  Wisdom, 

folly  ousted  reason  quite  ?     Fr.    Fu.  6  :  329.     C.  965. 
No   gift  but,  in  the  very  plenitude  Of   its    perfection,  goes 
maimed,  misconstrued   By  wickedness   or  weakness.      Fr. 
Fw.6:333.     C.  967. 
Weaknesses.     Since  all   flesh   is  weak.  Bind  weaknesses  to- 
gether, we  get  strength.     R.  and  B.  3  :  389.     C.  567. 
Wealth.     Shut  his  fool's-eyes  fast  on    the   visible  good  And 
wealth  for  certain.     R.  and  B.  3  :  37.     C.  429. 
yes,  you  're  banker-king  Or  merchant-kaiser,  wallow  in  your 
wealth.     R.  and  B.  3  :  114.     C.  459. 
Weapon.     To  o'er-sweep  all  these,  what 's  one  weapon  worth  ? 
King  V.  1:388.     C.  153. 
Tell  not  me  't  is  sharp   play  with  tools   on   edge  !     It   was 
the  husband  chose  the  weapon   here.     it.  aiid   B.  3  :  340. 
C.  548. 
The  intellectual  weapon  —  poet-lays.     Joch.  6  :  224.     C.  923. 
Weather-'wise.     who  mav  get  nipped  needs  be  weather-wise. 

Colomhe  2  :  185.     C.  232. 
Weed.     The  thoroughfares  were  overrun  with  weed  —  Docks, 
quitchgrass,  loathy  mallows  uo  man  plants.     Sor.  1  :  262. 
C.  102. 


276  WEED  —  WHOLE 

Weed,     huge  weed  widening  crack  and  split  In  squares  and 

circles  stone-work  erst.    Bad  D.  HI.  G  :  398  ;  7  :  22.   C.  990. 
Weeds,     the  niggard  pasturage  Bears  not  on  its  shaven  ledge 

Aught  but  weeds.     Para.  1  :  111.     C.  44. 
Weeks.     So  weeks  grew  months,  years  ;  gleam  by  gleam  The 

glory  dropped   from  their  youth  and  love.     Stal.  and  B. 

2:326.     C.  285. 
Weeping.     Why,  there  's  a  Judge  weeping  !    Did  not  I  say  You 

were  good  and  true  at  bottom  ?    R.  and  B.  3  :231.    C.  50G. 
Welcome.     Then,    welcome   each   rebuff   That    turns   earth's 

smoothness  rough,  Each  sting.     Ben  Ezra  4  :  186.     C.  384. 
Well.     I  have  done  well,  though  not  all  well.     Para.  1  :  122. 

C.  48. 
Well-born.     Well  -  born,     of    culture,    young    and    vigorous, 

Comely  too.     R.  and  B.  3  :  328.     C.  543. 
Well-"wisher.     A  mere  well-wisher,  understand  !     I  '11  sit,  my 

life-long,  at  your  gate,  you  know.     Inn  A.  b  :  309.     C.  799. 
Wells.     (Wells  dry  up,  while  the  sky  is  sunny  and  blue.)     R. 

and  B.  3  :  136.     C.  468. 
When.     The  when  and  where  and  how  belong  To  me.   King  C. 

1 :  395.     C.  156. 
Whims.     Yet   still   we  let  our  whims  prescribe  despair.  Our 

fancies  thwart  and    cramp  our  will   and  power.     In  a  B. 

4  :  139.     C.  367. 

Whine,     a  kind  of  level  whine.     FligJit  2  :  298.     C.  275. 

By  semitones  from  whine  to  snarl  high  up  And  growl  down  low, 
one  scale  in  sundry  keys.     R.  and  B.  3  :  109.     C.  457. 
Whisper.     Uprose  that  creepy  whisper  from   out  the  crowd, 
is  wont,  when  fellow-men   confront  A  punishment.     Ivan 
6  :  140.     C.  886. 
White.     Were  just  the  white  o'  the  charge,  such  dreadful  depths 
Blackened  its  centre.     R.  and  B.  3  :  62.     C.  438 
finding  gray.  We  gladly  call  that  white  which  might  be  black. 

Too  used  to  the  double-dye.     R.  atid  B.  3  :  86.     C.  448. 
Too  white,  for  the  flower  of  life  is  red  ;  Her  flesh  was  the  soft 

seraphic  screen  Of  a  soul.     Gold  Hair  4  :  165.     C.  377. 
Black's    shade    on   White   is    White   too !      Bean-St.  6  :  271. 

C.  942. 
White  everywhere  for  certain  I  should  see  Did  I  but  under- 
stand how  white  is  black.     Bean-St.  6  :  277.     C.  944. 
White-cinct.     White-cinct,  because   in  white  walks  sanctity. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  382.     C.  564. 
White-lying.    Even  white-lying  goes  against  my  taste.    Inn  A. 

5  :  263.     C.  781. 

"Whiteness.     Some  whiteness  which,  I  judge,  thy  face  makes 

proud.     R.  mid  B.  3  :  32.     C.  427. 
Whole.     Each  having  and  each  lacking  somewhat,  both  Making 


WHOLE  —  WIFE  277 

a  whole  that  had  all  and  lacked  naught.     R.  and  B.  3  :  71. 

C.  442. 
Whole.     Intended  to  be  viewed  eventually  As  a  great  whole, 

not  analyzed  to  parts.     Cleon  4  :  116.     C.  359. 
One  takes  A  whole  life,  sees  what  course  it  makes  Mainly. 

Eas.-Day  4  :  41.     C.  330. 
Wicked.     He  must  be  wicked  to  deserve  such  pain.     Childe  R. 

2  :  332.     C.  287. 

Who  call  things  wicked  that  give  too  much  joy.     R.  and  B. 

3 : 415.     C.  577. 
Wickedness.     Ah  God,  some  prodigy  of  thine  will  stop  This 

planned   piece   of  deliberate   wickedness.     A  Blot   2  :  154. 

C.  221. 
Heaven's   memory  Of   wickedness   forgot  on  earth   so  soon. 

Liiria  2  :  371.     "C.  303. 
—  wave-washed  wall  Against  which  sets  a  sea  of  wickedness. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  24.     C.  424. 
the  curious  crime,  the  fine  Felicity  and  flower  of  wickedness. 

R.  and  B.Z -.2,0,9.     C.  558. 
Widened.    My  nature,  when  the  outrage  was  too  gross.  Widened 

itself  an  outlet  over-wide.     R.  and  B.  3  :  437.     C.  586. 
Wife.     Wife  you  want  Would  you  play  family-representative, 

Carry  you  elder-brotherly.     R.  and  B.  3  :  40.     C.  430. 
A  wife  that  flies  her  husband's  house,  does  wrong  :  The  male 

friend's   interference    looks    amiss.        R.    and    B.   3  :  57. 

C.  437. 
Here  is  that  wife,  —  who  makes  her  sex  our  plague.  Wed- 
lock, our  bugbear,  —  perhaps  with  cause  enough.    R.and  B. 

3  :  133.     C.  467. 

If  I  was  over-harsh,  —  the  worse  i'  the  wife  Who  did  not  win 
from  harslmess  as  she  ought.     R.  and  B.  3  :  159.     C.  477. 

my  wife  Gone  God  knows  whither,  —  rifled  vesture-chest,  And 
ransacked  money-cofl^er,     R.  and  B.  3  :  164.     C.  480. 

a  gamesome  wife  Able  to  act  Corinna  without  book.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  173.     C.  483. 

that  sweet   tremulous   flower-like   wife.     R.  and   B.  3  :  183. 

C.  487. 

Shall  false  wife  vet  have  where  to  lay  her  head  ?     R.  and  B. 

3  :  308.     C.  536. 
For  wife  must  follow  whither  husband  leads.  Vindicate  honor 

as  himself  prescribes.     R.  and  B.  3  :  340.     C.  548. 
And  leave  the  pale  awe-stricken  wife,  past  hope  Of  help  i' 

the  world  now,  mute  and   motionless.     R.  and  B.  3 :  368. 

C.  558. 
While  oiit  of  the  poor  trampled  worm  the  wife,  Springs  up  a 

serpent  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  371.     C.  559. 
Laud  to  law  !     The  wife  is  pushed  back  to  the  husband.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  378.     C.  562. 


278  WIFE  — WILL 

Wife.     My  wife  proved,  whether  by  her  fault  or  mine,  —  That 's 

iniinatei'ial,  —  a  true  stumbling-block.     It.  and  B.  3:437. 

C.  586. 

A  dearest  best  and  brightest  virtuousest  Wife.   Inn  yl.  5  :  302. 

C.  797. 

Wife's.     Ply  the  wife's  trade,  play  off  the  sex's  trick  And,  .  .  . 

prettily  fool  .  .  .  into  patience.     R.  and  B.  3  :  34.     C.  428. 

Wives.     Wives  like  the  typical  Spouse  once  more,  and  Priests 

No  longer  men  of  Belial.     R.  and  B.  3  :  188.     C.  489. 
Wifehood.      Womanliness   and    wifehood   opaline.    Its    milk- 
white  pallor,  —  chastity.     R.  and  B.  3  :  324.     C.  542. 
Wild,     the  monstrous  wild  a-hungered  to  resume  Its  ancient 

sway.     Ivan  6  :  131.     C.  881. 
Wilderness.    And  truly  made  a  wilderness  to  smile.   Red  Cott. 

5  :  17.     C.  743. 
Wildings,     wildings  planted  in  a  prim  parterre.     R.  and  B. 

3  :  320.     C.  540. 
Wildness.     Most  wildness  by  degrees  Softens  away.     Hal.  and 

Hob  6  :  128.     C.  879. 
Wile,     this  way  of  wile  were  good  to  catch,  But  I  have  not  the 

sleight  of  it.     King  C.  1:399.     C.  157. 
Will.     I  profess  no  other  share  In  the  selection  of  my  lot,  than 
this  Sly  ready  answer  to  the  will  of  God.     Para.  1  :  34. 
C.  15. 
Now,  't  is  this  I  most  admire  —  The  constant  talk  men  of  your 
stamp  keep  up  Of  God's  will,  as  they  style  it.     Para.  1  :  73. 
C.  30. 
one  would  swear  Man  had  but  merely  to  uplift  his  eye.  And 
see  the  will  in  question  charactered  On  the  heaven's  vault. 
Para.  1  :  73.     C.  30. 
I  know  as  much  of  any  will  of  God  As  knows  some  dumb  and 
tortured  brute  what  Man,  His  stern  lord,  wills  from  the 
perplexing  blows  That  plague  him  every  way.     Para.  1  :  73. 
C.  30. 
None  Could   trace   God's  will   so  plain  as  you,  while  yours 

Remained  im2>lied  in  it.     Para.  1  :  98.     C.  39. 
divest  Mind  of  e'en  Thought,  and  lo,  God's  unexpressed  Will 

draws  above  us  !     Sor.  1  :  297.     C.  116. 
I  would  I  could  adopt  your  will,  See  with  your  eyes.     Two 

in  C.  2  :  72.     C.  189. 
(He   did  God's  will  ;  to  him,  all  one  If  on  the  earth  or  in  the 

sun.)     Boy  and  Ang.  2 -.239.     C.  254. 
What  will   but  felt   the  fleshly  screen  ?     Last   Ride  2  :  280. 

C.  268. 
all   yet  uncertain  save  the  will   To  do  right,  and  the  daring 
aught  save  leave  Right  undone.     R.  and  B.  3  :  178.     C.  485. 
**  Have  you  the  will  ?     Leave  God  the  way  ! "     R.  and  B. 
3:270.     C.  521. 


WILL  — WIXE  279 

WilL     It  is  the  will  runs  the  renewing  nerve  Through  flaccid 

flesh  that  faints  heiore  the  time.    R.  and  B.  3  :445.    C.  589. 
The  man's  fantastic  will  is  the  man's  law.      Karshish  4:67. 

C.  339. 
What  if  the  Cause,  whereof  we  now  descry  So  far  the  wonder- 
working, lack  at  last  Will.     Fr.  Fu.  0  :338.     C.  968. 
"Willows.     Drenched  willows  flung  them  headlong  in  a  fit  Of 

mute  despair,  a  suicidal  throng.     Childe  R.  2  :  333.     C.  288. 
Wind,     bleak  wind,  hankering  after  pining  leaves.      Autumn 

would  fain  be  sunny.     Para.  1  :  27.     C.  12. 
the   melancholy  wind   astir  Within  the  trees.     Para.  1  :  84. 

C.  34. 
Like  an  asp,  The  wind  slips  whispering  from  bough  to  bough. 

Para.  1 :  84.     C.  34. 
When  the  wind  would  edge  In  and  in  his  wedge,  In,  as  far  as 

the  point  could  go.     Lovers'  Q.  2  :  28.     C.  172. 
The  sullen  wind  was  soon  awake.  It  tore  the  elm-tops  down 

for  spite.     Porph.  2  :  329.     C.  286. 
Still   ailing.    Wind  ?      Wilt   be   appeased   or   no  ?      /.   Lee 

4  :  158.     C.  374. 
The   wind  Shoulders  the  pillared  dust,  death's  house  o'  the 

move.    And   fast  invading   fires    begin  !       Caliban   4  :  213. 

C.  394. 
distinct  above  Man's  wickedness  and  folly,  flies  the  wind  And 

floats   the  cloud,  free  transport  for   our  soul   Out  of   its 

fleshly  durance  dim  and  low.     Ari  A.  5: 100.     C.  628. 
Winds.     From   tree-tops   where   tired  winds   are  fain.  Spent 

with  the  vast  and  howling  main —     Para.  1  :  90.     C.  36. 
Oh,  never  more  for  me  shall  winds  intone  With  all  your  tops 

a  vast  antiphony.     A  Blot  2  :  175.     C.  228. 
gay  winds  that  war  Against   strong  sunshine  settled  to  his 

sleep.     Red  Cott.  5:1.     C.  736. 
Windows.      As    though    heaven's    bounteous    windows  were 

slammed  fast.     Sor.  1  :  259.     C.  100. 
And  windows  narrow,  nor  was  air  enough  Nor  light  enough, 

but  all  looked  prison-like.     R.  and  B.  3  :  62.     C.  438. 
what  long  light  elegance  Of  windows  here  suggests  how  brave 

inside  Lurk  eyeballed  gems  they  play  the  eyelids  to  !     Red 

Cott.  5  :  16.     C.  742. 
Wine,     fill  his  cup  With  wine  .  .  .  when  lees  are  left,  And 

send  him  from  life's  feast  rejoicingly.     R.  and  B.  3  :  46. 

C.  432. 
Fortified  by  the  sip  of  .  .  .  why,  't  is  wine,  Yelletri,  —  and 

not  vinegar  and  gall.     R.  and  B.  3  :  143.     C.  471. 
wine  unlocked  the  stiffest  lip,  and  loosed  The  tongue  late  dry 

and  reticent  of  joke.     /Iri.  ^.  5  :  140.     C.  644. 
Man's  invention  of  —  Wine  !     Apol.  and  F.  6  :  289.     C.  950. 
wine,  manhood's  master  !     Fust  6  :  380.     C.  985. 


280  WINGED  — WIT 

Winged.     Would,  tree,  a-top  of  thee  I  winged  were.     Inn  A. 

5  :  271.     C.  785. 
Winter,     autumn  claps  Her  hands,  cries  Winter  's  coming,  will 

he  here,  Off  with  vou  ere  the  white  teeth  overtake  !     R. 

and  B.  3  :  93.     C.  451. 
I  have  worn  through  this  sombre  wintry  day,  With  winter  in 

my  soul  beyond  the  world's.     R.  and  B.  3  :  3G1.     C.  555. 
Whom  Summer  made  friends  of,  let  Winter  estrange  !     J. 

Lee  4  :  155.     C.  374. 
What  makes  glad  Life's  Winter  ?     New  buds,  old  blooms 

after.     St.  Mart.  5  :  352.     C.  814. 
Wiped,     wiped  its  filthy  four  walls  free  at  last  With  a  wash  of 

hell-fire.     R.  and  B.  3  :  65.     C.  440. 
Wisdom.     Wisdom  set  working  in  a  noble  heart.     Prince  H. 

4  :  344.     C.  687. 
Wisdom-tooth.     To  suit  the  wisdom-tooth,  just  cut,  of  the 

age.     Fijine  4  :  425.     C.  725. 
Wise.     So,  I  grew  wise  in  Love  and  Hate,  From  simple  that  I 

was  of  late.     Pippa  1  :  347.     C.  137. 
One  wise  man's  verdict  outweighs  all  the  fools'.     Bishop  B. 

4  :  100.     C.  352. 
So,  grind  away,  mouth-wise  and  pen-wise.  Do  all  that  we  can 

to  make  men  wise  !     Pacch.  5  :  327.     C.  805. 
The  wise  man,  first  of  all,  scorns  riches  :  But  to  scorn  them 

must  obtain  them.     Pietro  6  :  173.     C.  902. 
Wisest.     The  best  men  ever  prove  the  wisest  too  :  Something 

instinctive  guides  them  still  aright.     Balau.  4  :  295.     C.  614. 
Wish.     — wish  that  wished   in  vain — nay,  will  That  willed 

and  yet  went  all   to  waste  —  't  is  these  Kankle  like  fire. 

Camel-D.  6  :  259.     C.  937. 
Wished.     So,  you  saw  yourself  as  you  wished  j'ou  were,  As 

you  might  have  been,  as  you  cannot  be.     Old  Pict.  2  :  39. 

C.  176. 
Wishing.     So  mucli  for  idle  wishing  —  how  It  steals  the  time  ! 

To  business  now.     Italian  2  :  256.     C.  260. 
Wit.     You  see,  the  man  was  Aretine,  had  touch  O'  the  subtle 

air  that  breeds  the  subtle  wit.     R.  and  B.  3  :  123.     C.  463. 
(Which  was  soon  —  penury  makes  wit  premature.)     R.  and 

B.  3 : 146.     C.  472. 

Therefore  shall  the  lady's  wit  Supply  the  boon  thwart  nature 

balks.     R.  and  B.  3  :  334.     C.  545. 
Whose  feeding  hath  obfuscated  his  wit  Rather  than  law, — 

he  never  had,  to  lose.     R.  and  B.  3  :  351.     C.  552. 
Splendor  of  wit  that  springs  a  thunderball.     Ari.  A.  5  :  117. 

C.  635. 

Just  wit  justly  strikes  .  .  .  Finds  out  in  knaves',  fools', 
cowards'  armory  The  tricky  tinselled  place  ...  No  damage 
else,  sagacious  of  true  ore.     Ari.  A.  5: 117.     C.  635. 


WIT  — WOMAN  281 

Wit.     flake  of  Wit  —  Laiij]^liter  so  bejewcls  Learning, — what 

but  Ferney  nourished  it  ?     La  S.  6  :  74.     C.  SoS. 
"Witch.     As  a  young  witch  turns  an  old  hag  at  night.     Pau. 

1  :  23.     C.  10. 

As  a  fair  witch  turned  an  ohl  hag  at  night.     Pau.  1  :  23.* 
Witched.     'Tis  certain  she  has  witched  you  with  a  speU.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  262.     C.  518. 
Witchery.     The  witchery  of  gesture,  spell  of  word.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  330.     C.  544. 

Withdraw.  No  more  now  :  I  withdraw  from  earth  and  man 
To  my  own   soul,  compose  myself   for   God.     R.   and   B. 

3  :  277.     C.  524. 

Withers,  tap  the  generous  bole  Too  near  the  quick,  —  it  with- 
ers to  the  root.     Red  Colt.  5  :  51.     C.  755. 

Witless.  In  such  various  degree,  fly  and  worm,  ore  and  plant, 
All  know,  none  is  witless.     Fust  6  :  380.     C.  985. 

Witlessness.  So  acts  man  three-years  old  !  I  grieve  now  at 
my  loss  by  witlessness.     Camel-D.  6  :  259.     C.  937. 

Witnessing.  Closet-like,  kept  aloof  From  unseemly  witness- 
ing.    Bad  D.  II.  6  :  39G  ;  7  :  17.     C.  989. 

Wive.  He  being  Head  o'  the  House,  ordained  to  wive.  R. 
and  B.  3  :  115.     C.  459. 

Woe.     I   have   dealt  falsely,  and   this  woe  is   come.     Druses 

2  :  126.     C.  209. 

The  first  woe  fell.  And  the  rest  fall  upon  it,  not  on  me.     A 

Blot  2  :  175.     C.  229. 
Let  this  old  woe  step  on  the  stage  again  !     Act  itself  o'er 

anew  for  men  to  judge.     R.  and  B.  3  :  19.     C.  422. 
Simple  ?      Why  this  is  the  old  woe  o'  the  world.     J.  Lee 

4  :  160.     C.  375. 

Woes.     Why  else  have  I  sought  refuge  in  myself,  But  from 
the  woes  I  saw  and  could  not  stay  ?     Pau.  1:17.     C.  8. 
Why  have  not  I  sought  refuge  in  myself,  But  for  the  woes  I 

saw  and  could  not  stay  ?     Pau.  1  :  17.* 
Before  1  learned  what  woes  are  pity- worth.     Inn  A.  5:  281. 

C.  788. 

Wolf.     A  touch  of  wolf  in  what  showed  whitest  sheep,  A  cross 
of  sheep   redeeming  the   whole   wolf.     R.   and  B.  3 :  15. 
C.  420. 
Woman,     the   mere   woman,    speaking  for  herself.    Reserves 
speech  —  it    is    now    no    woman's    time.      Luria    2  :  394. 
C.  312. 
Some  semblance  of  a  woman  yet  With  eyes  to  help  me  to  for- 
get.    Eas.-Day  4  :  53.     C.  334. 
Woman   does  the  work  :  I  waive  the  help  of  Man.     Fijine 

4:413.     C.  718. 
I  who,  a  woman,  claim  no  quality  Beside  the  love  of  all  things 
lovable.     Ari.  A.b:  162.     C.  653. 


282  WOMAN  — WOOD 

Woman,     a  mere  woman,  I  recoil  From  what  may  prove  mau's- 

work  permissible.     Ari.  A.  o  :  162.     C.  Go3. 
show  me  where  's  the  woman  won  without  The  help  of  this 

one  lie  which  she  believes.     Inn  A.  o  :26o.     C.  782. 
merely  virtue,  wisdom,  beauty  —  merged  All  in  one  woman. 

Dan.  Bar.  G  :  310.     C.  958. 
Some  self-scathed  woman,  framed  to  bless  not  curse  Nature. 

Fr.  Fit.  6  :  340.     C.  969. 
Woman-country.     Oh  woman-country,  wooed  not  wed,  Loved 

all  the  more  by  earth's  male-lands.   By  Fire.  2  :  60.    C.  185. 
Woman-like.     Crescents   change,  —  true!  —  wax   and   wane, 

Woman-like  :    male   hearts   retain   Heat.      Crist,   and   M. 

6 : 203.     C.  915. 
Woman-liker.     My  life-long  I  Ve  been  a  woman-liker,  —  lik- 
ing means  Loving  and  so  on.     Inn  A.  5  :2o8.     C.  779. 
Woman-nature,     woman-nature  —  the  soft  sway  Of  undefin- 

able  omnipotence  O'er  our  strong  male-stuff.     Joch.  6  :  220. 

C.  922. 
Woman-shape.     A  certain    woman-shape,   one  white  appeal. 

Red  Cott.  5  :  53.     C.  756. 
Woman's,     with  the  woman's  stand  apart.  The   heart  to  see 

with,  past  man's  brain  and  eyes.     Luria  2  :  386.     C.  308. 
Woman's-heart.     But   if   some   wonder   of   a   woman's-heart 

Were  yet  untainted  on   this  grimy  earth,  —     R.  and  B. 

3  :  75.     C.  444. 

Women.     Kind  women  still  give  men  a  woman's  prize.   Luria 

2 : 368.     C.  301. 
Few  families  were  racked  By  torture  self-supplied,  did  Nature 

grant  but  this — That  women  comprehend  mental  analysis  ! 

Fifii^e  4  :  397.     C.  709. 
Women  rush  into  you,  and  there  remain  absorbed.     Fijine 

4:413.     C.  719. 
Women  grow  vou,  while  men  depend  on  you  at  best.     Fijine 

4  :  413.     C.  719. 

'tis  women  stand  confessed  Auxiliary,  the  gain  that  never 

goes   away,  Takes  nothing   and   gives   all.     Fijine  4  :  418. 

C.  721. 

Oh,  Women  are  ready  at   resource,  you  know  !     Two  Poets 

6:97.     C.  867. 

Womanhood.     Yet  womanhood  you  reverence.    Lady  6  :  406  ; 

7:44.     C.  993. 
Womankind.     So  much  for  men  .  .  .  But  you  have  to  deal 
with  womankind  ?     Abandon  stratagem  for  strategy  !     Fi- 
jine 4  :  415.     C.  720. 
(I   had   a   hit  at  AristuUos  here.  His  plan  how  womankind 
should  rule  the  roast.)     Ari.  A.  5: 125.     C.  638. 
Wont.     What 's  nature  ?     Wont.     Sor.  1  :  249.     C.  96. 
Wood,     life's  wood  is  intricate  :  How  shall  he  fail  to  thrid  its 


i 


WOODS  — WORDS  283 

thickest  through  When  every  oak-trunk  takes  the  eye  ? 
Joch.  6  :  228.     C.  925. 
Woods.     This  is  tlie  very  heart  of  tlie  voods  all  round  Moun- 
tain-like heaped  ahove  us.     Pan.  1  :  19.     C.  9. 
Word,     though  this  weak  soul  sink  and  darkness  whelm,  Some 
little  word  shall  light  it,  raise  aloft.     Puu.  1  :  25.     C.  11. 

See  a  word,  how  it  severeth  !     Lovers'  Q.  2  :  30.     C.  173. 

no  word  more  !  Since  words  are  only  words.  Give  o'er  ! 
Gondola  2  :  2G4.     C.  2G2. 

Some  one  word  spoken  more  Out  of  my  heart,  and  all  had 
changed  perhaps.     Zt(m  2: 395.     C.  312. 

how  else  know  we  save  by  worth  of  word  ?  R.  and  B.  3  :  19. 
C.  422. 

one  word  on  the  other  side  Tips  over  the  piled-up  fabric  of  a 
tale.     R.  and  B.  3  :  126.     C.  46-1. 

Ah,  but  a  word  of  the  man's  very  self  Would  somehow  put 
the  keystone  in  its  place.     R.  and  B.  3  :  415.     C.  577. 

Sirs,  have  I  spoken  one  word  all  this  while  Out  of  the  world 
of  words  I  had  to  say  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  457.     C.  594. 
Words.     Words  are  wild  and  weak.  But  what  they  would  ex- 
press is,  —     Pau.  1  :  23.     C.  10. 

For,  what  are  the  voices  of  birds  —  Ay,  and  of  beasts,  —  but 
words,  our  words.  Only  so  much  more  sweet  ?  Pinna  1  :  304. 
C.  144. 

What  so  wild  as  words  are  ?     Woman's  2  :  22.     C.  171. 

Oh,  for  the  time,  the  social  purpose'  sake.  Use  words  agreed 
on,  bandy  epithets.  Call  any  man  the  sole  great  wise  and 
good  !     Luria  2  :  384.     C.  308. 

Lucidity  of  soul  unlocks  the  lips  :  I  never  had  the  words  at 
will  before.     R.  and  B.  3  :  407.     C.  574. 

certain  words,  broad,  plain.  Uttered  again  and  yet  again, 
Hard  to  mistake  or  overgloss.     Eas.-Day  4  :  37.     C.  329. 

first  words  spoke.  The  true,  the  only,  that  turn  my  grave  To 
a  blaze  of  joy  and  a  crash  of  song.      Worst  4  :  171.     C.  379. 

Words  have  to  come  :  and  somehow  words  deflect  As  the  best 
cannon  ever  rifled  will.     Prince  H.  4  :  378.     C.  700. 

Words  struggle  with  the  weight  So  feebly  of  tlie  False,  thick 
element  between  Our  soul,  the  True,  and  Truth  !  Fijine 
4 : 408.     C.  715. 

He  who  cannot  see,  must  reach  As  best  he  may  the  truth  of 
men  by  help  of  words  They  please  to  speak.  Fijine  4  :  427. 
C.  727. 

And  so  the  imseemly  words  were  interchanged  Which  crystal- 
lize what  else  evaporates.  And  make  mere  misty  petulance 
grow  hard  And  sharp  inside  each  softness,  heart  and  soul. 
Red  Colt.  5  :  52.     C.  756. 

Ay,  if  words  never  needed  enswathe  aught  But  ignorance,  im- 
pudence, envy.     Pacch.  5  :  331.     C.  807. 


284  WORDS  — WORK 

Words.     What  if  words  were  but  mistake,  and  looks  —  too  sud- 
den, say  !     Epil.  Melon.  6  :242.     C.  930. 

Aboininable  words  which  blister  tongue  ?    Sun  6  :  249.    C.  933. 

Words,  surging  at  high-tide,  soon  ebb  From  starved  ears. 
Apol.  and  F.  6  :  292.     C.  951. 

words  break  no  bones  !  (Hearts,  though,  sometimes.)  Dan, 
Bar.  G  :  304.     C.  955. 

So,  my  words  have  unloosed  A  plie  from  those  pale  lips  corru- 
gate but  now  ?     Fust  6  :  3G8.     C.  980. 
Work.     Our  gifts,  once  given,  must  here  abide.   Our  work  is 
done  ;  we  have  no  heart  To  mar  our  work.     Para.  1  :  97. 
C.  39. 

What  a  man's  work  comes  to  !  So  be  plans  it.  Performs  it, 
perfects  it,  makes  amends  For  the  toiling  and  moiling,  and 
then  sic  transit  !     Old  Pict.  2  :  39.     C.  176. 

when  this  life  is  ended,  begins  New  t.  ork  for  the  soul  in  an- 
other state.     Old  Pict.  2  :  41.     C.  177. 

A  moment's  work  —  but  such  work  !     Druses  2  :  125.     C.  208. 

stepped  on  with  pride  Over  men's  pity  ;  Left  play  for  work, 
and  grappled  with  the  world.     Gram.  Fun.  2  :  311.     C.  279. 

For  you  and  the  others  like  you  sure  to  come,  Fresh  work  is 
sure  to  follow.     R.  and  B.  3  :  192.     C.  491. 

A  source  of  honest  profit  and  good  fame.  Just  so  much  work 
as  keeps  the  brain  from  rust.     R.  and  B.  3  :  280.     C.  526. 

Conjecture  of  the  worker  by  the  work.  R.  and  B.  3  :  386. 
C.  565. 

Have  I  done  worthy  work  ?  be  love's  the  praise.  In  a  B. 
4 : 136.     C.  366. 

Oh,  never  work  Like  his  was  done  for  work's  ignoble  sake  — 
Souls  need  a  finer  aim  to  light  and  lure  !  In  a  B.  4: :  141. 
C.  368. 

Here,  work  enough  to  watch  The  Master  work,  and  catch 
Hints  of  the  proper  craft,  tricks  of  the  tool's  true  play. 
Ben  Ezra  4  :  188.     C.  384. 

he  has  done  his  work  For  work's  sake,  worked  well,  earned  a 
creature's  praise.     Prince  H.  4  :346.     C.  688. 

Little  you  guess  how  such  tough  work  tasks  soul  !  Not  over- 
tasks, though.      Ari.  A.  5  :  120.     C.  636. 

Let  strength  propose  itself,  —  behind  the  world — Sole 
prize  worth  winning,  work  that  satisfies  Strength  it  has 
dared  and  done  strength's  uttermost !  Ari.  A.  5  :  120. 
C.  636. 

He  worked,  destroying  other  older  work  Which  the  world 
loved  and  so  was  loth  to  lose.     Ari.  A.  5  :  160.     C.  652. 

Here 's  my  work  :  does  work  discover  —  What  was  rest  from 
work  —  my  life  ?     At  the  M.  5  : 332.     C.  807. 

work  I  may  dispense  With  talk  about,  since  work  in  evidence, 
Perhaps  in  history.     Forgiv.  5  :  362.     C.  818. 


II 


WORK  —  WORLD  285 

"Work,     each  only  as  God  wills  Can  work  —  God's  puppets,  best 

and  worst,  Are  we.     Pi/ipa  1  :  331.     C.  130. 
dance  done,  To  work,  with  plough  and  harrow  !     li.  and  B. 

3  :  31^5.     C.  542. 
Work,  be  unhappy  but  bear  life,  my  sou  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  383. 

C.  564. 
Working-time,     he  was  past  the  working-time.  Had  learned 

to  dandle  and  forgot  to  dig.     R.  and  B.  3  :  39.     C.  429. 
World,     that  world  Where  great  hearts  led  astray  are  turned 

again.     Straf.  1 :  191.     C.  73. 
God  must  be  glad  one  loves  his  world  so  much.     Pippa  1  :  354. 

C.  139. 
Foul  be  the  world  or  fair  ...  'T  is  the  world  the  same  For 

my  praise  or  blame.     Lovers'  Q.  2  :  30.     C.  173. 
For  oh,  this  world  and  the  wrong  it  does  !     They  are  safe  in 

heaven  with  their  backs  to  it.     Old  Pict.  2  :  38.     C.  170. 
How   the  world   is   made   for   each  of  us  !     By  Fire.  2  :  QQ. 

C.  187. 
O  world,  as  God  has  made  it !     All  is  beauty  :  And  knowing 

this,  is  love,  and  love  is  duty.     Guar.  Aug.  2  :89.     C.  194. 
Leave   Their   honorable   world   to   them  !     For   God  We  're 

good    enough,   though    the   world   casts   us   out.     A    Blot 

2  :  173.     C.  228. 
there  seemed  nothing  to  do  more.     But  the  world  thought 

otherwise  and  went  on.     Flight  2  :  307.     C.  278. 
This    world 's   too   hard   for   my  explaining.     Flight   2  :  309. 

C.  279. 
The  world  and  its  ways  have  a  certain  worth.     Stat,  and  B. 

2 : 325.     C.  285. 
Oh  world,  where  all  things  pass  and  naught  abides.     Luria 

2  :  377.     C.  305. 
His    hand   is    still  engaged   upon   his  world.     Luria  2  :  402. 

C.  315. 
I'  the  teeth  of  the  world  which,  clown-like,  loves  to  chew  Be 

it  but  a  straw  'twixt  work  and  whistling-while.     R.  and  B. 

3:8.     C.  417. 
the  world  ducks  and  defers.     R.  and  B.  3  :  39.     C.  429. 
the  world  which  trifles  not  When  lineage  lacks  the  flag  yet 

lifts  the  pole.     R.  and  B.  3 -.UG.     C.472. 
—  It  seemed  so  stale  and  worn  a  way  o'  the  world.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  254.     C.  515. 

In  a  low  noisy  smoky  world  like  ours  Where  Adam's  sin 
made  peccable  his  seed  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  311.     C.  537. 

Wise  in  its  generation  is  the  world.    R.  and  B.  3  :  305.    C.  557. 

the  world  —  The  beauty  and  the  wonder  and  the  power,  .  .  . 
—  and  God  made  it  all  !     Fra  Lippo  4  :  80.     C.  344. 

But   somehow   the  world   pursues  its  game.      Worst  4 :  173. 

C.  379. 


286  WORLD  —  WORST 

World.      The  world  goes  on,  goes  ever,  in  and  through.  And 

out  again  o'  the  cloud.     Balau.  4  :302.     C.  617. 
Shall  you  dare  controvert  what   the  world   counts   divine  ? 

Fifine  4  :  395.     C.  708. 
I  stand   at  such   a   distance  from   the  world   That  't  is  the 

whole  world  which  obtains  regard.    Red  Cott.  5:5.     C.  738. 
That  world   which  prates  of  fixed  laws  and  the  like,  I  fain 

would   save,   poor   world  so   ignorant !      Red  Cott.   5  :  80. 

C.  766. 
How  woman-like  it  is   to  apprehend  The  world  will  eat  its 

words  !     Two  Poets  6  :  109.     C.  871. 
yonder  where  the  world  Lies  wreck-strewn,  —  evil  towering, 

prone  good.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  338.     C.  968. 
"World-repute,     so  has  world-repute  Preceded  the  illustrious 

stranger.     Inn  A.  5  :  291.     C.  792. 
World's.     But  all,  the  world's  coarse  thumb  And  finger  failed 

to  plumb.     Ben  Ezra  4  :  189.     C.  385. 
Worm,     the    worm,    our   busy   brother,  drills   His   sprawling 

path  through  letters  anciently  Made  fine  and  large  to  suit 

some  abbot's  eye.     Sor.  1  :  197.     C.  76. 
Uncoil  we  and  stretch  stark  the  worm    of  hell  !     R.  and  B. 

3  :  19.     C.  422. 
for  a  worm  must  turn  If  it  would  have  its  wrong  observed  by 

God.     R.  and  B.  3  :  273.     C.  523. 
(Granite  and   mussel-shell   are   ground    alike   To   glittering 

paste,  —  the    live    worm    troubles    yet.)     Red    Cott.   5 : 2. 

C.  737. 
yon  worm,  man's  fellow-creature,  on  yon  happier  world  —  its 

leaf  !     LaS.Q:  66.     C.  854. 
a  worm  inside  which  bores  at  the  brain  for  food.     Mar.  Rel. 

6  :  117.     C.  875. 

Worms.     Horrible  worms  made  out  of  sweat  and  tears.     R. 

and  B.  3  :  29.     C.  426. 
Worms'-meat.     worms'-meat  any  moment  !  mutters  low  Some 

Power,  admonishing   the  mortal-born.     Imp.  Aug.  6  :  427  ; 

7  :  87.     C.  1002. 

Wormy.     That  is  the  fruit  of  all  such  wormy  ways.  The  indi- 
rect, the  unapproved  of  God.     R.  and  B.  3  :  252.     C.  514. 

Worship.     So,  men  believe  And  worship  what  they  know  not, 
nor  receive  Delight  from.     Sor.  1  :  219.     C.  85. 

Worshipped.     Is  worshipped  —  which  means  loved  and  praised 
at  height.     Sun  6  :  249.     C.  933. 

Worse,     if   joy  delays,  Be  happy  that  no  worse  befell  !     In 
Three  D.  2  :  82.     C.  192. 

Worst.     Xever  say — as  something  bodes — So,  the  worst  has 
yet  a  worse  !     Serenade  2  :  74.     C.  190. 
Wherefore  so  ready  to  infer  the  worst  ?    R.  and  B.  3  :  169. 
C.  482. 


WORST  — WRITES  287 

"Worst.     For  sudden  the  worst  turns  the  Lest  to  the  brave,  The 
black  minute  's  at  end.     Prospice  4  :  21G.     C.  395. 
Grant    me  (once  again)  assurance  we  sliall  each  meet  each 
some  day,  .  .  . — Worst  were  best,  defeat  were  triumph, 
utter  loss  were  utmost  gain.     La  S.  6  :  G7.     C.  855. 
Oh  worst,  worst,  worst  of  all !     King  V.  1 :  387.     C.  152. 
That  which  seems  worst  to  man  to  God  is  best.    Family  6 :  246. 
C.  932. 
"Worth,     put  forth  Never  the  inmost  all-surpassing  worth  That 
constitutes  him  king.     Sor.  1:295.     C.  115. 
The  inward  work  and  worth  Of  any  mind,  what  other  mind 
may  judge  Save  God  who  only  knows  the  thing  He  made, 
The  veritable   service   He   exacts  ?      R.   and    B.   3  :  393. 
C.  568. 
I  have  my  lesson,  understand  The  worth  of  flesh  and  blood 

at  last !     /.  Lee  4  :  162.     C.  376. 
No  creature 's  made  so  mean  But  that,  some  way,  it  boasts, 
could   we  investigate.  Its  supreme  worth.     Fi/ine  4  :  393. 
C.  707. 
No,  when   the  fight   begins  within  himself,  A  man's   worth 

sometliing.     Bishop  B.  4  :  107.     C.  355. 
All   I  could  never  be.  All,  men  ignored  in  me,  This,  I  was 
worth  to  God.     Ben  Ezra  4  :  189.     C.  385. 
"Wrangled.     Thus  wrangled,  brangled,  jangled  they  a  month. 

R.  and  B.  3  :6.     C.  416. 
"Wrath,     breaks  wavelike  one  whole  foam  of  wrath.     R.  and  B, 
3  :  357.     C.  554. 
yellowed,  whitened,  as  his  wrath  from  red  Waxed  incandes- 
cent.    T(co  Poets  6 -.96.     C.  866. 
"Wreck,   when  slow  the  whirling  wreck  subside,  the  boundaries, 

lost  now,  shall  be  found  again.     Luria  2  :  378.     C.  305. 
"Wrecker's,     so,   forsooth,   forestall   the    wrecker's  fee  !     Let 
the  next  crew  be  wise  and  hail  in  time  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  27. 
C.  425. 
"Wretch.     Another  poor  weak  trembling  human  wretch  Pushed 
by  his  fellows,  who  pi'etend  the  right,     it.  and  B.  3  :  360. 
C.  555. 
"Wrinkle.     Limneth  exact  each  wrinkle  of  the  brow,  Loseth  no 

involution,  cheek  or  chap.     R.  and  B.  3  :321.     C.  541. 
"Write.     How   happy  those  are  who  know  how  to  write  !     R. 
and  B.  3  :  239.     C.  509. 
So  write  a  book  shall  mean  beyond  the  facts.  Suffice  the  eye 

and  save  the  soul  beside.     R.  and  B.  3  :  477.     C.  601. 
An   itch   I   had,  a  sting  to  write,  a  tang !     Karshish  4  :  65. 

C.  338. 
Does  he  write  ?  he  fain  would  paint  a  picture.     One  Word 
4 : 125.     C.  362. 
"Writes.     Somebody  says  —  if  a  man  writes  at  all  It  is  to  show 


288  WRITHED  —  WRONG 

the  writer's  kitli  and   kin  He  was  unjustly  thought  a  nat- 
ural.    Ta-o  Poets  6  :  104.     C.  870. 
"Writhed,    writhed  transfixed  through  all  her  spires.    R.  and  B. 

3:51.     C.  434. 
"Writing-paper.    Flooded  with  truth  for  better  or  for  worse,  — 

He  pounces  on  the  writing-paper.     2'wo  Poets  6  :  85.    C.  862. 
"Wrong.     And  they  mean  Consummate  calmly  this  great  wrong  ! 

No    hojje  ?      This   ineffaceable   wrong !      No   pity   then  ? 

Straf.  1  :  171.     C.  Go. 
One   wrong  more   to  man,  one  more  insult  to  God  !     Lost  L. 

2:4.     C.  164. 
Turned  wrong  to  right,  proved  wolves  sheep  and  sheep  wolves. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  15.     C.  420. 
The  injury  must  be  less  by  lapse  of  time  ?     The  wrong  is  a 

wrong,  one  and  immortal  too.     R.  and  B.  3  :  140.     C.  470. 
And  mau}^  sly  soft  stimulants  to  wrath  Compose  a  formidable 

wrong  at  last.     R.  and  B.  3  :  423.     C.  580. 
triumphant  wrong  Tramples  weak  right  to  nothingness.     Ber. 

deM.G:2d7.     C.  953. 
So  should   wrong  merely  peep  abroad  to  meet  Wrong's  due 

quietus.     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  297.     C.  953. 
Though  wrong  were  right.  Could  we  but  know  —  still  wrong 

must  needs  seem  wrong  To  do  right's  service,  prove  men 

weak  or  strong.  Choosers  of  evil  or  of  good.   Fr.  Fu.  6  :  339. 

C.  969. 
Have  you  no  assurance  that,  earth  at  end,  Wrong  will  prove 

right  ?     Rejih.  6  :  434  ;  7  :  100.     C.  1005. 
Ripeness  in  things  now  rathe.  Wrong  righted,  each  chain  un- 
bound, Renewal  born  out  of  scathe.     Rev.  6:439;  7:110. 

C.  1006. 
Have   I  done  wrong  ?     Yes,  for  you  were  not  by  !     King  V. 

1:387.     C.  152. 
I  'm   right,   sir  —  but   your   wrong  is   better   still.     Colombe 

2  :  199.     C.  238. 
Each  human  being  needs  must  have  done  wrong  !     R.  and  B. 

3:219.     C.  501. 
You  were  wrong,  you  see  :  that 's  well  to  see,  though  late. 

R.  and  B.  3  :  192.     C.  490. 
Well,  just  so  here  :  it  proved  wrong  but  seemed  right.     R. 

and  B.  3  ■.2'^3.     C.  511. 
But  I  did  wrong,  and  he  gave  wrong  advice  Though  he  were 

thrice  Archbishop.     R.  and  B.  3  :  253.     C.  515. 
Why,  join  the  rest  Who  liarm  me  ?     Have  I  ever  done  you 

wrong  ?     R.  and  B.  3  :  262.     C.  518. 
I  will  be  quiet  and  talk  with  you.  And  reason  why  you  are 

wrong.     /.  Lee  4  :  156.     C.  374. 
A  wild  wrong  way  Of  righting  wrong  —  if  wrong  there  were, 

such  wrath  to  rouse  !     Ivim  6  :  138.     C.  885. 


WRONGED  — YEARS  289 

"Wronged.     But  the  wronged  great  souls  —  can  they  be  quit 
Of  a  world  where  their  work  is  all  to  do.     Old  Pict.  2  :  38. 
C.  176. 
Wronged   hearts,   not   destined    to   receive   reward.      Luria 

2  :  384.     C.  308. 
no  heart  But  felt  the  quiet  patient  hero  there  Was  wronged. 

Luna  2  :  390.     C.  310. 
You   know  I   am  wronged  !  —  wronged,  say,  and   wronged, 
maintain.     R.  and  B.  3  :  453.     C.  592. 
"Wronger.     Will  the  wronger,  at  this  last  of  all,  Dare  to  say, 
"  I  did  wrong,"  rising  in  his  fall  ?     Before  2  :87.     C.  194. 
"Wrote.     For  though  mine  ancient  early  dropped  the  pen.  Yet 
others  picked  it  up  and  wrote  it  dry.     R.  and  B.  3 :  356. 
C.  554. 
Wrote  one  song  —  and  in  my  brain  I  sing  it.  Drew  one  angel 
—  borne,  see,  on  my  bosom  !     One  Word  4  :  129.     C.  363. 
"Wound.     But  a  wound  to  the  soul  ?     That  rankles  worse  and 
worse.     R.  and  B.  3  :  140.     C.  470. 


■yataghan.     Yataghan,  kandjar,  things  that  rend  and  rip.  Gash 

rough,  slash   smooth,  help  hate    so   many  ways.      Forgiv. 

5  :  364.     C.  819. 
■ya-wrn.     said  with  a  man's  true  air,  Half  sighing  a  smile  in  a 

yawn,  as  't  were.     Another  W.  2  :  76.     C.  190. 
Year.     The   year 's   at   the   spring   And   day 's  at   the    morn. 

Pippa  1  :  337.     C.  133. 
a   year   has    wrought   an    age's    change.      King    C.    1  :  400. 

C.  158. 
So,  the  year  's  done  with  !     Earth's  Im.  2  :  21.     C.  170. 
Year  by  year,  fear  by  fear  !     Druses  2  :  122.     C.  207. 
learn  and  love  Each  facet-flash  of  the  revolving  year  !     R. 

and  B.  3  :  31.     C.  426. 
the  year  packed  up  his  plagues  And  sullenly  departed,  ped- 
dler-like.    Red  Cott.  5  :  53.     C.  756. 
Years.     Not  that  he  was  to  die  ;  he  saw  askance  Protract  the 

ignominious  years  beyond.     Sor.  1  :  292.     C.  114. 
My   own,   see    where   the    years   conduct !      By  Fire.  2  :  63. 

C.  186. 
While  every  day  my  hairs  fall   more  and  more,  My  hand 

shakes,   and    the    heavy    years    increase.       Cleon   4 :  122. 

C.  361. 
I  have  lost  so  many  years  :  what  then  ?     Many  remain.     In  a 

B.  4  :  145.     C.  369. 
for  kind  Calm  years,  exacting  their  accompt  Of  pain,  mature 

the  mind.     /.  Lee  4  :  160.     C.  375. 


290  YEARS  — YOUNG 

Years.    Years,  in  tlieir  blind  implacable  advance.    Joch.  6  :  214. 

C.  919. 
Yearn.     No.     I  yearn  upward,  touch  you   close.  Then  stand 
away.     Tioo  in  C.  2  :  72.     C.  189. 
Thither  where  eyes,  that  cannot  reach,  yet  yearn  For  all  hope, 
all  snstainmeut,  all  reward.     R.  and  B.  3  :  32.     C.  427. 
Yearned-for.     the  immensely  yearHed-for,  once  befell.      Sun 

6  :  252.     C.  934. 
Yearning.     Till  the   yearning  slips   Through   the   finger-tips. 
Lovers'  Q.  2  :  28.     C.  173. 
Oh,  but  I  love,  would  lead  yon,  gain  your  thanks  By  unexam- 
pled yearning  for  Man's  sake.     Geo.  B.  D.G:  322.     C.  9G3. 
Yesterday.     Yesterday  so  blue  !     To-morrow  Blank,  all  sun- 
shine banished.     Flute-M.  6  :  421  ;  7  :  74.     C.  999. 
Yield.     Mark  me  :  you  yield  No  jot  of  aught  entrusted  you  ! 
King  V.  1  :  389.     C.  153. 
And  there  the  two  stood,  stare  confronting   smirk.   Awhile 
uncertain  which  should  yield  the  pas.     Two  Poets  G  :  lOG. 
C.  870. 
Yoke,     what  if  justice  swerves  .  .  .  leaves  life's  yoke  —  Death 
should  loose  man  from  —  fresh  laid,  past  release  ?      Ber. 
de  M.  6  :  296.     C.  952. 
the  yoke  of  the  Church  is  an  easv  one  —  Fits  neck  nor  causes 
smart.     Ponte  ^.  6  :  407  ;  7  :  47.     C.  994. 
You.     Me,  your  own,  your  You,  —  Since,  as  truth  is  true,  I 
was  You  all  the  happy  past.     Lovers'  Q.  2  :30.     C.  173. 
What,  you,  Sir,  come  too  ?     (Just  the  man  I  'd  meet.)     R. 

and  B.  3  :  33.     C.  427. 
the   world   fades  ;   only  you  stand  there  !     In  a  B.   4: :  151. 

C.  372. 
Yet  the  strong  fierce  heart's  love's  labor's  due.  Utterly  lost, 

was  —  you  !     Mary  W.  6  :  206.     C.  916. 
You  in   the  flesh  and   here  —  Your  very  self  !     Bad  D.  II. 
6  :  395  ;  7  :  16.     C.  989. 
Yours.     I   choose   to   be   yours,  for  my  proper  part.      Worst 
4  :  170.     C.  378. 
Call   me   yours  —  Yours  and    the   world's  —  yours   and    the 
world's  "and  God's  !     Inn  A.o:  289.     C.  792. 
Yourself.     Best  be  yourself,  imperial,  plain  and  true  !     Bishop 
B.  4  :  93.     C.  350. 
With  yourself  it  rests  to  have  a  month  of  morrows  like  to-day  ! 
La  S.  6  :  56.     C.  850. 
Young,      must  ever  wear  A  darkened  brow,  an  over-serious 
look.  And  never  properly  be  young.     Straf.  1 :  192.     C.  74. 
I  was  so  young,  I  loved  him  so,  I  had  No  mother,  God  forgot 

me,  and  I  fell.     A  Blot  2  :  157.     C.  222. 
I  am  very  joung,  and  yet  I  have  entangled  other  lives  with 
mine.     A  Blot  2  :  171.     C.  227. 


YOUNCx  — YOUTH  291 

Young,     but  I  was  young,  And  your  surpassing  reputation  kejjt 

me  So  far  aloof  !     A  Blot  2  :  172.     C.  228. 
We  have    been   voung,  too,  —  come,   there 's  greater  guilt  ! 

R.  and  B.  3  :  189.     C.  489. 
But  —  young  you  have  been,  are  not,  nor  will  be  !     R.  and  B. 

3:426.     C.  581. 
Well,  I  resent  this  ;  I  am   young  in  soul,  Xor  old  in  body. 

R.and  B.Z-.^Q.     C.  581. 
when  we  both  were  young,  And  I  tasted  the  angels'  fellowship. 

Worst  4  :  171.     C.  379. 
Young,  all  lay  in  dispute  ;  I  shall  know,  being  old.     Ben  Ezra 

4  :  188.     C.  384. 
Had  the  epithet  been  'rich,'  'Noble,'  'a  genius,'  even  'hand- 
some,' —  but  '  Young '!     Inn  A.  5  :  259.     C.  780. 
Youngling.     A  youngling  stem  all  green  and  immature.     Joch. 

6  : 225.     C.  924. 
Youth.     Let  me  weep  My  yoiith  and  its  brave  hopes,  all  dead 

and  gone,  In  tears  which  burn  !     Para.  1:  50.     C.  21. 
Youth   is  the  only  time   To  think  and  to  decide  on  a  great 

course.     Straf.  1 :191.     C.  74. 
No  !   youth  once  gone  is  gone  :  Deeds  let  escape  are  never  to 

be  done.     Sor.  1  :  240.     C.  9.3. 
Youth  —  my  dream  escapes  !  Will  its  record  stay  ?     Stat,  and 

B.  2  :  327.     C.  285. 

Youth,  with  its  beauty  and  grace,  would  seem  bestowed  on 
us  ...  to  make  us  partly  endurable  till  we  have  time  for 
really  becoming  so.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  359.     C.  298. 

girl  .  .  With  .  .  .  first  crisp  youth  that  tempts  a  jaded  taste, 
Was  whisked  i'  the  way  of  a  certain  man.    R.  and  B.  3  :  39. 

C.  429. 

O   youth,  men   praise   so,  —  holds     their   praise   its   worth  ? 

Pict.  Ig.  4  :  74.     C.  342. 
Youth  shows  but  half  ;   trust  God  :    see  all,  nor  be  afraid  ! 

Ben  Ezra  4  :  185.     C.  383. 
but  vouth  can  reach  Where  age  gropes  dimly,  weak  with  stir 

and  strain.     Death  in  D.  4  :  198.     C.  388. 
Youth,  Stark  ignorance  and  crude  conceit,  half  smirk,  ha]f 

stare  On  that  frank  fool-face.     Fifine  4  :  426.     C.  726. 
youth.  Nigh  on  departure,  bids  mid-age   discard  Life's  other 

loves  and  likings.     Red  Cott.  5  :  18.     C.  743. 
Few  flowers  that  played  with  youth  shall  pester  age.     Red 

Co«.  5:30.     C.  748. 
as  well  not  keep  too  close  a  watch  ;  Youth   must  be  left  to 

some  discretion.     Red  Cott.Ty.'iX.     C.  748. 
think  out  thoroughly  how  youth  should  pass  —  Just  as  if  youth 

stops  passing,  all  the  same  !     Ari.  A.o:  147.     C.  647. 
he  finds  that  youth  fleets  fast.  That  town-life  tires,  that  men 

should  drop  boys'-play.     Inn  A.  5  :  302.     C.  797. 


292  YOUTH  — ZEALOUS 

Youth.     Youth  ripens  to  arrogance,  foolishness,  greed.     Apol. 

and  F.  G  :  287.     C.  949. 
Youth's,    track  too  rough  For  youth's  unsteady  footstep.    Joch. 

G:213.     C.  919. 


Zeal.     As  if  zeal,  courage,  prudence,  conduct,  faith.  Had  never 
met  in  any  man  before.     Luria  2  :  362.     C.  299. 
the  undue  zeal  That  spoils  the  force  of  his  own  plea.     R.  and 

B.  3  :  233.     C.  507. 

The  author  lacks  Discretion,  and  his  zeal  exceeds  :  but  zeal, 
—  How  rai'e  in  our  degenerate  day  !     R.  and  B.  3  :  343. 

C.  549. 

But  zeal  outruns   discretion.     Here  I  end.     Karshish  4 :  65. 

C.  338. 
zeal  does  only  half  the  work.     Inn  A.  5:281.     C.  788. 
thy  zeal  sublimes  Such  drudgery.     Joch.  6  :  217.     C.  921. 
Zealot.     A  zealot  with  a  mad  ideal  in  reach.     Bishop  B.  4  :  113. 

C.  357. 
Zealous.     I  for  man's  effort  am  zealous.     Master  H.  2 :  95. 
C.  196. 


INDEX 


A-begging.   Baku.  4:304.    C.  618. 
A-bloom.     Saul,  2  :  52.     C.  182. 
A-blush.    Red  Cott.  5  :  97.  C.  773. 

202. 

A-bowsing.     Ned  B.  6:143.      C. 

887. 
A-broach.     Fust,  6 :  370.     C.  981. 
A-bubble.  R.  &  B.  3 :  26.    C.  425. 

i2g. 
A-building.    How  it  S.  4  :  59.     C. 

336. 
A-bnzzing.    Her.  Trag,  2  :  314.    C. 

280. 
A-chuckle.     Prince  H.  4 :  351.     C. 

689. 
A-clatter.    R.  &  B.  3 :  152.   C.  475. 

22g. 
A-eockhorse.     Chris.  -  Eve,  4 :  26. 

C.  325. 
A-eoming.  A  Blot,  2: 145.  C.  217. 
A-crackle.  Ari.A.  5:129.  C.  640. 
A-crawling.  Paeeh.5:326,  (7.805. 
A-creak.  Red  Cott.  5  :  22.  C.  744. 
A-enimble.      St.  Prax.  4 :91.     C. 

349. 
A-dangle.    R.  &  B.  3 :  296.      C. 

532. 
A-dangling,     R.  &  B.  3  :  30.     C. 

426. 
A-doi'ng.     Balau.  4 :  288.     C.  612. 
A-dying.     Solil.  2  :  13.     C.  168. 
A-faeing.      Fil.  Bald.  5:377,     C. 

824. 
A-fading.    Agam.  6:6.     C.  832. 
A-field.     Red  Cott.  5:3.     C.  737. 
A-fire.     Flight,  2 :  290.     C.  271. 
A-fizz.     Fifine,  4 :  417.     C.  721. 
A-flaunt.    Sor.  1 :  263.     C.  102. 
A-flieker.   Ari.  A.  5  :  185.    C.  662. 
A-flutter.    De  Gus.  2 :  45.  C.  178. 
A-foot.    Ari.  A.  5: 181.     C.  <361. 
A-fume.   Red  Cott.  5 :  38.    C.  751. 
A-gazing.   R.  &  B.  3:  259.    C.  517. 
A-gee.     Pacch.  5  :  322.     C.  804. 
A-glimmer.    Sor.  1 :  245.     C.  95. 
A-gloom.     Fust,  6:366.     C.  979. 

99- 


A-glow.  Mesmer.  2  :  246.  C.  256. 

A-good.     Ned  B.  6  :  145.  C'.  888. 

A-grime.     Fifine,  4  :  421.  C.  723. 

A-haUo.    Chas.  A.  6  :  363.  C.  978. 

US- 
A-heap.   Fr.  Fu.  6 :  330.     C.  965. 
A-heaving.     Ari.   A.  5 :  179.      C 

660. 
A-hiding.    R.  &  B.  3:  23.    C.  423. 
A-hokUng.  Up  —  Down,  2  :  34.   C. 

175. 
A-howling.  La  S.  6  :  74.    C.  858. 
A-hungered.   Iv^n,6:131.    C.  881. 

278. 
A-hiint.     Ari.  A.  5 :  204.     C.  669. 
A-joint.    Sor.  1 :  226.     C.  87. 
A-journeying.   R.  «fe  B.  3:  320.    C. 

540. 
A-laughing.     Ari.  A.  5  :  157.     C 

651. 
A-leering.   Holy-C.  2 :  318.   C.  282. 
A-lisp.    R.  &  B.  3:340.      C.  548. 

26. 
A-listening.    Red  Cott.  5 :  32.    C. 

748. 
A-longing.  R.  &  B.  3  :  295.  C.  531. 
A-lying.      Ari.  A.  5  :  139.     C.  644. 
A-making.      Fra  Lippo,  4 :  80.    C. 

344. 
A-maundering.      R.  &  B.  3  :  419. 

C.  579. 
A-muek.   Waruig,  2  :  274.    C.  266. 
A-musing.     Saul,  2  :  48.     C.  180. 
A-paeing.      Imp.  Aug.  6 :  425  ;   7 : 

83. _    C.  1001. 
A-painting.    Fra  Lippo,  4  :  75.    C. 

342. 
A-pardoniug.     Pippa,  1 :  362.      C 

143. 
A-passing.   Ari.  A.  5: 127.   C.  639. 
A-peering.  Ari.  A.  5: 127.   C.  639. 
A-petting.    Fil.  Bald.   5:375.    C. 

823. 
A-praising.     Fia  Lippo,  4  :  78.    C 

344. 
A-prancing.    R.  &  B.  3 :  466.     C. 

597. 


293 


A-pricking 


INDEX 


Absent 


A-prickhig.    K.&B.  3:196.     C. 

A-pushing.  R.  &  B.  3 :  113.  C.  450. 
A-quiver.  Balau.  4  :  314.  C.  622. 
A-rhyming.   Two  Poets,  6  ;  84.    C. 

862. 
A-ringing.   R.&  6.3:156.  C.  476. 
A-ripple.     Cleon,  4  :  121.    C.  361. 
A-roar.     Ari.  A.  5  :  126.    C.  639. 
A-rolling.    R.  &  B.  3:  31.    C.  426. 
A-row.      R.  &  B.  3  :  10.    C.  418. 
203. 

Bean-St.  6  :  272.  C.  942.  128. 

A-rustle.    R.  &  B.  3:  437.    C.  586. 

22. 
A-screaming.  Ari.  A.  5 :  121.  C.  637. 
A-seethe.   Chas.  A.  6 :  359.  C.  976. 
A-shake.     Ari.  A.  5  :  185.    C.  662. 
A-shine.   Sor.  1 :  216.    C.  84. 
A-sliiver.     Sor.  1 :  252.     C-  98. 

R.&B.  3:   59.    C.  437.  205. 

A-simmer.  Ned  B.  6  :  144.  C.888. 
A-singing.  R.  &  B.  3:51.  C.  434. 
A-sittiiig.  Ari.  A.  5  :  148.  C.  (M8. 
A-slide.     Inn  A.  5  :  2()2.     C.   781. 

Fust,  6  :  378.     C.  984.     264. 

A-slipping.    R.  &  B.  3 :  113.     C. 

459. 
A-smoke.    R.  &  B.  3 :  21.     C.  423. 

210. 
A-sparkle.     Apol.  &  F.  6  :  288.    C 

949. 
A-splutter.     Ari.  A.   5  :  137.      C. 

(;43. 
A-spread.    Ned  B.  6 :  147.    C.  890. 

100. 
A-sprinkle.     Agam.  6 :  18,    C.  837. 
A-sprout,     Doctor,  6 :  183.    C.  906. 

III. 
A-stare.     Childe    R.  2:332.     C. 

287.     III. 
A-straddle.     Ned  B.  6:149.     C. 

891. 
A-strain.     La  S.  6:6.5.     C  854. 

247. 
A-stream.    Mul^y.  6  :  165.    C.  898. 
A-stretch.     Camel-D.   6:258.     C. 

937. 
A-strut.    Inn  A.  5  :  300.     C.  796. 
A-strutting.    At  the  M.  5 :  333.   C. 

808. 
A-swarm.    Sor.  1 :  196.     C.  76. 
A-sweetening.    R.  &  B.  3  :  3.     C. 

415. 
A-swell.    Ari.  A.  5  :  179.     C.  660. 
A-swim.    Ger,  de  L.  6 :  349.  C.  973. 
A-swing.     Pippa,  1 :  336.     C.  132. 
A-throb.    Fifine,  4:416.     C.  720. 


A-throb.   Chas.  A.   6:363.  C.978. 

"3. 
A-tilt.    R.  &  B.  3:349.     C.  551. 

122 

A-tingle.  Two  Poets,  6 :  92.  C.865. 

256. 
A-tiptoe.    R.  &  B.  3 :  27.     C.  425. 
35. 

Red  Cott.  5:  66.     C.  761. 

A-top.     Inn    A.    5:274.     C.   785. 
280. 

Joch.  6  :  230.    C.  926.    III. 

A-tremble.     Red  Cott.  5  :  32.     C. 

748. 
A-trundling.    Red  Cott.  5  :  94.    C. 

ITl. 
A-waft.    R.  &  B.  3 :  280.    C.  526. 
A-walking.     Trans.  4  :  57.     C.  336. 
A-wantoning.    Ari.  A.  5  :  113.     C. 

634. 
A-wave.    Saul,  2 :  53.    C.  182. 
A-whirl.     Pietro,  6 :  173.     C.  902. 
A-wing.     King  V.  1 :  385.     C.  152, 
A-wondering.    Shidge,  4 :  251.     C. 

410. 
A-wooing.     Gondola,   2:264.      C, 

262. 
A-work._   Saul,  2  :  50.     C.  181. 
A-worrying.    Shidge,    4 :  248.     C. 

409. 
A-writing.    Karshish,    4 :  65.      C 

338. 
A-yelp.     Master  H.  2 :  94.     C.  19(3. 
Abate  Paolo.    R.  &  B.  3:  39.     C. 

429.     180. 
Abbey-for-the-Males.     Red   Cott. 

5:  15.     C.  742. 
Abdomen.    Flight,  2  :  297.    C  274. 

225. 
Abhor.     Fifine,    4:421.     C.   723. 

137. 
Abide.     Fifine,  4:420.     C.  723. 
Ability.     Inn  A.   5:271.     C.  784. 

no. 
Abjured.     Inn  A.  5  :  275.     C.  786. 

229. 
Able.  Druses,  32  :  117.  C.  205.  143. 
Abler-skiUed.    Bea.  Sig.  6 :  413  ;  7 : 

59.     C.  996. 
Abominable.    Sun,  6  :  249.    C.  933. 
Ari.  A.  5  :  162.  C.  653.  218. 


294 


Aboriginary.    R.  &  B.  3 :  446.  C. 

589. 
Abroach.     Para.  1 :  79.     C.  32. 
Absence.    R.&B.  3: 139.     C.  470. 

2ig. 
Absent.    R.  &  B.  3 :  276.     C.  524. 

159. 


Absent 


INDEX 


Admixture 


Absent.    R.  &  B.    3:287.    C.528. 

31. 
Absoluteness.    Sor.  1 :  318.    (7.124. 
Absorbed.    Fifine,4:413.    C.719. 

282. 
Abysm.    R.  «fe  B.  3 :  200.     C.  494. 

232. 
Accept.     Druses,  2  :  117.     C  205. 

143. 
Accession-day.  B.  &  B.  3 :  475.   C. 

G(X). 
Acciaiuoli.    R.   &  B.  3 :  404.     C. 

572. 
Accloyer.    Joch.   6  :  219.     C.  921. 

44.       .        .         ,  ^ 

Accomplice-city.  Agam.G:17.   C 

837. 
Accomplice- wife.    R.&B.  3:274. 

C.  523. 
Aceompt.    J.  Lee,  4: 160.     C.  375. 

289. 
Account.     Ari.  A.  5  :  128.     C-  G40. 
49. 

Ber.  de  M.   6 :  295.    C.  952. 

72. 
Accretion-clogged.     Chris.  Sm.  6 : 

316.     C.  960. 
Accurst.     App.    Fail.   4:259.     C. 
413.    17. 

Bad D.  111.6:398;  7:  22.  C. 

990.     171. 
Accustomed.    Waring,  2 :  271.    C. 

265.     70. 
Ache.    Gondola,  2  :  267.     C.  263. 
201. 

Ari.  A.  5 :  102.  C.  629.  189. 

Aches.    Epil.  Mihrab,  6  :  256.     C. 

936.     81. 
Ached.     King  V.  1 :  373.     C.  147. 

68. 
Achievements.     Cleon,  4 :  116.    C 

359.     137. 
Achilles.    Ger.  de  L.  6 :  349.     C. 

973.     49. 
Acknowledged.     R.  &  B.  3  :  400. 

C.  571.     168. 
Acorn-cup.     Iv^n,  6  :  141.     C.  886. 
Acorn-eating.     R.    &    B.    3:295. 

C.  531.     46. 
Acorn-top.     Red    Cott,    5:4.     C. 

738. 
Acquiesce.   AbtV.4:185.    C.383. 

182. 
Acquiescence.    Shah,    A.   6 :  243. 

C.  931.     16. 
Acquist.    Eas.-Day,4:32.    C.  327. 

122 

Two  Poets,  6  :  106.    C.  870. 


Acromion.    Bea.  Sig.  6 :  414  ;  7  :  61. 

C.  9!)7. 
Act.    Straf.  1 :  147.     C.  56.     109. 

.Sor.  1  :  297.     C.  115.     252. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  384.  C.  564.  213. 

Ben  Ezra,  4  :  189.     C.  385. 

253. 

La  S.  6:  70.     C.  8.56.     26. 

Crist.  &  M.  6 :  203.    C.  915. 

149. 
Acts.    R.&B.  3:  389.  C..567.    67. 
Chris.-Eve,  4 :  24.     C.    324. 

37- 
Ari.  A.  5:108.  C.  6.32.  237. 


Action.     Para.  1:49.     C.21.    151. 

Soul's  Tr.  2  :  339.      C.  290. 

181. 

Li  a  B.  4 :  149.  C.  370.  140, 

Forgiv.  5  :  .365.     C.  819. 


Action-time.     Numph.  5 :  347.     C. 

813 
Actor.    R.    &   B.   3:67.     C.  440. 

130. 
Actor-lassitude.     Red  Cott.  5  :  30. 

C.  747. 
Actors-out.    Sor.  1 :  288.     C.  112. 
Actual.    Ger.  de    L.  6:344.     C. 

971.     115. 
Adage.    La  S.  6:71.     C.  857.   82. 
Adam.    Sludge,  4 :  244.     C.  407. 

Ivkn,  6  :  1.31.    C.  881.     176. 

Adam-like.     R.    &  B.   3:71.     C. 


R.  &  B.3:311. 


C.  537. 
C. 


442. 
Adam's. 

285. 
Adding.      Soul's  Tr.   2:354. 

296.     265. 
Addle-pates.    EpU.  Pacch.  5  :  393. 

C.  829. 
Addison's.    Ber.  de  M.  6 :  296.    C. 

9.52. 
Adela.    Count  G.  2 :  238.     C.  253. 
Adelaide.     Sor.  1 :  203.     C.  79. 
AdemoUo's.     R.    &   B.   3:9.     C. 

418. 
Adjudicator.  Which,  6 :  401 ;  7 :  29. 

C.  991. 
Admetos.     Balau.  4:273.     C.  606. 
Admiration.     Para.  1  :  94.     C  38. 
32. 

Sor.  1 :  .325.     C.  127.     1 21. 

R.&B.  3:  461.  C.595.  120. 

Admire.    Para.  1  :  73.    C.  30.  278. 

Sor.  1 :  322.     C.  126. 

Colombe,    2  :  230.     C.    250, 

"5- 
Admixture.    Fr.   Fu.  6:333.     C. 
967.    200. 


295 


Adolf 


ixdp:x 


Agonized 


Adolf.    Colombe,  2  :  182.     C.  2.31.  I 
Adopt.    Two  in  C.  2  :  72.     C.  189. 

278  I 

Adornment.    Red  Cott.  5 :  22.     C. 

Advance.    Pan.  1:15.    C.7.   ^3^. 

Prince  H.  4  :  340.     C.  680. 

194. 
Prince  H.  4:352.     C.  G90. 

Jo?h.  6:214.     C.  919.    290. 

Chris.  Sm.  6:  312.     C.  959. 

57. 
Advanced.    Para.  1 :  110.     C.  44. 

E.'^&B.3:142.  C.471.  114. 

Advantage.    King  V.  1 :  378.     C. 

149.     258. 
. R.   &  B.  3:365.     C.   557. 

175. 
Adventure.     Ari.    A.   5:129.     C. 

640.     172. 

Inn  A.  5:  2.55.    C.  778.    133- 

Don.  6  :  193.     C.  911.     241. 

Adventures.     Sor.  1:207.     C.  80. 


Right,  2:  298. 

Colombe,  2: 227. 

.    R.&B.3:132. 


Ari.  A.  5:160.  C.652. 
:145.  C. 
,  C.  445. 
:  313.     C. 


46. 
Adverse. 

197. 
Adversity.    In  a    B. 

:3(J9.     loi. 
Adviser.     R.  &  B.  3  : 

93. 
Advocate.    R.   &  B. 

538.     190.  _   ,„„ 

^acus.     R.  &B.  3:20.     C.  422. 
^lian.    R.  &B.3:(;.     C.416. 
uEschylus.     Ber.  de  M.  6 :  300.     C. 

954.  169. 

Aery.     Luria,  2  :  .394.     C.  312.  18. 

After-age.    Touch,  6: 191.    C.  910. 

186.  -, 

After-battle.  Soul's  Tr.  2 :  339.   C. 

290. 
After-care.    Bishop  B.  4  :  102.    C. 

.353. 
After-combat.    Two  Poets,  6 :  110. 

C.  872.     202. 

After-construction.   Pacch.  5 

C.  806.  ,    ^    ^ 

After-contest.    Ger.  de  L.  6 

C.  973.  _ 

After-counsels.    An.    A.   o: 

C.  650. 
After-doubt.    Death  in  D.  4 

C.  390. 
After-feeling.     Luria,  2  :  378. 

306. 
After-gust.    Sor.  1 :  326.     C.  127 


After-intention. 

C.  275. 
After-judgment. 

C.  249. 
After-knowledge 

C.  467.    71. 
After-rae.    R.  &B.3:365.    C.557. 
After-meditation.    R.  &B.3:336, 

C.  516. 
After-mom.    Confess.  2  :  17. 

i(;9. 

After-pangs.     Inn  A.  5  :  296. 

794. 
After-practice.     R.   &   B.   3 

C.  447.     197- 
After-sadness.    Flight,  2  :  293 

272. 
After-signs.    Para.  1 :  33.     C.  15. 
After-stage.     R.  &  B.  3  :  396.     C. 

5G9. 
After-supper.  Waring,  2  :  271.   C. 

265.  ^ 

After-time.    Pan.  1:8.     C.  5, 

Para.  1:82.     C.  3.3.     165. 

R.&B.3:362.     C.  5.56-    2 

After-wit.    R.&B.3:38.    C.  429 


c. 
c. 

85. 

c. 


:328. 

:350. 

154. 

:  203. 

C. 


34. 
After-years.    Ivkn,  6 :  137.    C  884. 
Against.     R.&B.3:i:30.     C.46G. 

58- 

R.&B.3:309.    C.536.    27. 

Age.    Pau.  1 :  16.  C.  8.    259. 

— R.&B.3:24.    C.424.    242. 

Ben  Ezra,  4 :  188.  C.  3X4.  48. 

Death  in  D.  4  :  198.     C.  388. 

291. 

Balau.4:288.   C.  612.   258. 

Prince  H.  4 :  357-     C.  692. 

53. 

Fifme,4:.391.  C.  706.     225. 

Red   Cott.    5:30.     C.   748. 

Red  Cott.  5:48.      C.  754. 

23. 

Prol.  A.  6  :  389 ;  7:1.      C. 

987.     212. 
Age- weighed.     Agam.    6:5.     C. 


832. 

Age- whitened.      Ari.    A.  5  :  182. 

C.  661.  ^       „ 

Aged.    R.  &  B.  3:141.  C  4<0. 

Agents.    R.  &  B.  3 :  431.    C  583. 

Amolo.    Andrea,  4  :  a5.     C.  347. 
Ago.  R.  &  B.  3  :  30.   C.  426\  255. 
Agonized.    AbtV.4:185.    C.383. 
1     224. 
296 


Ahithophel 


INDEX 


All-good 


Ahithophel.    Joch.fi:  227.    C.925. 
Aid.  R.&B.  3:174.   C.  48.S.  221. 

Red  Cott.  5  :  72.      C.   7(i3. 

178. 

La  S.  6:58.     C.  851.     158. 

Aim.    Evelyn,  2:  24.    C.  171.    136. 
R.   &  B.  3:121.     C.  402. 

47- 
R.  &  B.  3:337.      C.  547. 

178. 
In    a  B 

284. 
Inn    A. 

109. 
Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  320 

158. 
Dev.  6 :  431 ;  7 :  93. 

134. 
Eas.-Day,  4:32. 


.    4:141.     C.  368. 
5:285,      C.    790. 


C.  962. 
C.  1003. 
C.  327. 


Aims. 
244 
Air.     Pau.  1 :  19.     C.  9.     274. 

Pippa,  1 :  365.    C.  144.    166. 

Another  W.  2  :  70.     C.  190. 

289. 
R.  &    B.  3:62,      C.    438. 

279. 
Chris.-Eve,  4  :  21.     C.  323. 

41- 

La  S.  6  :  57.     C.  851.    249. 

Akiba.     Joeh.  6  :  216.     C.  920. 
Alarm.    Red  Cott.  5 :  59.     C.  758. 

223. 
Album-language.    Inn  A.  5  :  249. 

C.  776. 
Album-style.    Inn  A.  5:  249.     C. 

776. 
Album-word,    Inn  A,  5  :  249.     C. 

776. 
Alembic.    La   S.  6:67 


C.   855, 

C,  770, 

C.  194. 
C.   114. 


Alert.    Red  Cott,  5  :  88. 

194. 
Alfred.  Guard.  Ang.  2 :  89. 
Aliment.      Sor.    1 :  294. 

104. 
Alit.    Sor.  1 :  311.     C.  121. 
Alive.     Pau.  1:17.     C.  8.     141. 

Waring,  2  :  274.   0.266.  59. 

R.  &  B.  3  :  31.     C.  426.     2. 

R.&B. 3: 177.  C.485.  153. 

Red  Cott.  5  :  83.      C.  7(i8. 

190. 

Ber.  de  M.  6  :  295.     C.  952. 

72. 
Alkahest.    Joeh.  6:227.     C.925. 
Alkestis.     Balau.  4 :  273.     C.  606. 
All.  R.&B.  3:  435.   C.585.   144. 


All.     Ben  Ezra,  4:  190.     C.  385. 
246. 

Shidge,  4 :  245.   C.407.  204. 

Sonnet,  C.  11.     91. 

All-Absorbing.     Para.   1 :  49.     C. 

21.     5- 
All-aecoraplished.   Dev.  6 :  429 ;  7  : 

91.     C.  100.3.     215. 
All-affected.     Luria,   2:370.     C. 

.302. 
All-agape.      Fr.    Fu.  0:3;!2.      C. 

966. 
All-agog.     Clive,  0 :  155.     C.  893. 
All-appropriate.    Red  Cott.  5:  47. 

C.  754.     9. 
All-awork.     Chas.  A.  6  :  357.     C. 

975. 
All-bewildered.     R.  &  B.  3  :  341. 

C.  548.     163. 
All-but-at.    R.  &  B.  3:438.     C. 

586.     227. 
All-but-just-succeeding.        Chris.- 
Eve,  4  :  29.     C.  326. 
All-but-proved.     Flute-M.  6 :  424 ; 

7  :  80.     C.  1001. 
All-causing.    Sun.  6  :  250.     C.  934. 
All-collecting.     Red   Cott.   5:23. 

C.  745.     32. 
All-complete.    Saul,  2 :  56.  C.  183. 

174. 
All-comprising.     Pan,  6 :  188.     C 

909.     172. 
All-conclusive.      Numph.    5  :  349. 

C.  813. 
All-consoling.     R.  &  B.  3:  50.     C. 

434. 
All-convincing.       Druses,     2 :  136, 

C.  213. 
All-courageous.    Agam.  6 :  37.    C 

844. 
All-despicable.  Forgiv.  5 :  366.  C. 

820. 

Sor.   1:308.     C. 


All-embracing 

120. 
All-exacting. 

308.     82. 
All-excelling. 
All-explosive. 

858. 
All-express 

C.  363. 
All-fair. 

75- 
All-fours 

13. 
All-good 


297 


Luria,   2 :  385.     C. 

Para.  1:67.    C.  28, 
La  S.   6  :  74.     C. 

One    Word,    4:127. 

Joeh.  6:232.     C.  927. 

R.&B.3:38.    C.429. 

La  S.  6  :  65.     C.  854. 
Family,  6 :  246,    C.  932.   94. 


All-good 


INDEX 


Aloof 


All-goofl.     Bean -St.  G:278.     C. 

AlS-eat^'  Karsh.  4  :  70.     C  340. 
Al!-iUustrious.    K.  &  B.  3  :  2-. 

4''o 
All-imbued.     Two    Poets,   6 

^'  ^^'"  CUve,  6  :  159. 


C. 

;84. 


C. 

Joeh.  6:231,    C. 

Ger.  de  L.  6  :  351. 

Ber.  de  M 


C. 
C. 
C. 

Sm. 


6 


All-important. 

895. 
All-inadequate. 

'.)26.    53- 
AU-includinpr. 

C.  973.     182, 
All-incomplete 

mi.     C.  954. 
All-inexperienced.     Balau.  4 :  -»J. 

All-inventive.     Fr.  Fu.  G  :  .>3< .    C. 

'H)8 
Ail-Loving.    Karsh,  4:  70     C.  340. 
All-mighty.      Family,  6 :  240.      C. 

932.     94. 
All-momentous.     Red  Cott.  5  :  83. 

AU-ohsequious.    Joch.  6 :  219.     C. 

M'^l. 
All-pervading.     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  301. 

All-potency.    Mihrab,  6  :  253.     C. 

All-potent.    La  S.  6  :  65.     C.  854. 
All-powerful.      Bean -St.    b:i(». 

C.  944.     94. 
All-reconciling 

C.  973.     88. 
All-recondite. 

789 

All-revealed.    Para  1 :  82      C.  33 
All-sagacious.   Karshish,  4 :  64.  V. 

Ail-so.    Pv.  &  B.  3:311.     C.  537. 

All-stupendous.    Eas.-Day,  4  :  37. 

C.  329. 
All-suijduing.     Bean -St.    6:276. 

C  ''43 
All-sufficient.    Para.  1 :  38.    €.11. 
Chris.-Eve,   4:1G.     C.  321. 

All-surpassing.     Sor.    1:295.      C. 

All-tlie-worid.    Red.    Cott.   5:52. 

C  756 
AU-too.  ■  Ger.  de    L.   6  :  344.     C. 

970.  .         _         . 

All-too-demonstrative.    Imp.  Aug. 

6:428;  7:88.     C.  1002. 


Ger.  de  L.  6 :  351. 
Inn  A.  5:282.     C. 


All-too-frank.     Fr.  Fu.  G :  330. 
Ail-transmuting.    Sor.  1 :  298. 

All-triumphant.  Fifine,  4  :  412 

718. 
All-unapproachable.     Chns 

G  :  314.     C.  9G0. 
AU-unerringly.    Red  Cott.    5:92. 

AU-iinestimated.      Luria,    2 :  381. 

C.  307.     179.  „      ^ 

All-unfair.     Red    Cott.    5:  /.     O. 

739. 
All-unfulfilled.    Bea.  Sig.  6 :  413 : 

7:59.     C.  996.     m. 
All-unhappy.    Ari.  A.  5:209.    C. 

All-uiiheard.     Joch.     6:216.      C. 

020.     188. 
All-unknown.     Shop,   5:3o9.      O. 

S09. 
All-unobstructed.      Ixion,    6:211. 

C.  918. 
All-unsuspected.    Inn    A.   5:260. 

C*   780 
AU-'unwary.    R.  &  B.  3: 159.     C. 

477.     118. 
All-unwilling.     Bea.    Sig.   6:417; 

7:G7.     C'.998.  _ 

All-wise.     La  S.  6  :  Go.     C-- 8o4. 
Joch.  6:232.     C.  927.     75- 
Family,     6:246.      C.    9o2. 

04. 
Bean-St.   6:278.      C.    944. 
94. 
AU-work.    Ari.  A.  5: 157.     C.651 


All-unworthy.     Family,  6 :  246.  C. 

93'^      177. 

1-^Chas.  A.  -6:360.  C.  977. 
Allure.  La  S.  6 :  73.  C.  858.  39- 
Allured.     Fifine,   4:418.     C.  722. 

102. 
Almighty.    Saul,    2:57. 

143. 
Almond-blossoms.   Sor.  1 

A?mug.    Sor  1:23.3.     C.  90. 
Aloe-balls.     Para.  1:90      C  36 
Aloe-haulm.    Sor.  1 :  291.     C.  113, 
Aloe-shafts.    Sor.  1 :  291.     C.  113 
Alone.     Para.  1:62.     C.  2o      224 

-Colombe,  2:  20b.     C 

24'?. 

R.&B.3:40.  C.430 

Aloof.    A  Blot,  2:172.     C 


C.   184. 
:246.   C. 


241. 


III. 

228. 


291. 


298 


Altar 


INDEX 


Anguish 


Altar.    Dan.  Bar.  6 :  310.     C.  95S. 

182. 
Altar-base.    Ari.   A.    5:20!).     C. 

070. 
Altar-foot.    R.&B.  3:211.     C. 

4'.).S. 
Altar-ministrant.     R.  &  B,  3  :  187. 

C.  48!). 
Altar-orts.     Ari.    A.    5:234.     C. 

678. 
Altar-scrap-snatcher.    Ari.   A.  5 : 

101.     C.  62!). 
Altar-side.     Agam.  6  :  9.     C.  833. 
Altar-smoke.   Joh.  Agri.  4 :  72.  C. 

341.     137. 
Alter.     Pau.  1 :  15,     C.  7.     234. 

Sor.  1 :  2<)2.     C.  114.     55. 

Alters.     Ari.  A.   5 :  110.     C.   632. 

48. 
Alteration-itch.     Lin    A.    5 :  312. 

C.  800.     12. 
Altered.     Pau.  1:6.     C.  4.    274. 
Alley-pliiz.    Red    Cott.  5:7.     C. 

im. 

Always-the-innovator.    Ari.  A.  5 : 

154.     C.  650. 
Amber-headed.    Ber.  de  M.  6 :  296. 

C.  952. 
Ambition.    R.&B.  3: 74.     C.443. 
26. 

R.   &   B.  3:472.     C.  599. 

192. 

Ari.  A.  5 :  169.  C.  656.   I13. 

Ambition's.    R.  «fe  B.  3:  318.     C. 

540.     55. 
Ambitious.    Para.   1:49.     C.  21. 

151. 
Ambush-wmdow.    R.&B.  3:  204. 

0.495.   _ 
Amelioration.     La    S.    6 :  68.     C 

855.     254. 
Amends.     La    S.    6:71.     C  857. 
66. 

Mar.  Rel.  6 :  116.     C.  875. 

77- 

Ixion,6:207.     C.916.    207. 

Amerce.     Ponte  A.   6:  410;  7:  52. 

C.  995. 
Amerced.    La  S.  6 :  70.     C.  856. 

96. 
Amercement.     R.&B.  3: 167.    C. 

4S1.     167. 
Amiss.     Death  in  D.    4:199.     C. 

388.     69. 
Amort.     Sor.  1 :  308.     C.  120. 
Ampollosity.    R.  &  B.  3  :  472.     C. 

5!)9. 
Anael.    Druses,  2:99.     C.  198 


Analysis.     Fifine,  4  :  397.     C.  709. 

282. 
Analyzed.     Cleon,  4  :  116.     C.  359. 

277. 
Ancestral.    Dan.  Bar.  6 :  306.     C. 

956.     171. 
Anchor.    Two    Poets,   6:  93.     C. 

865.     185. 
Ancona.     Guard.   Ang.  2 :  89.     C. 

1!I5. 
Andromeda.     Pau.  1 :  16.     C.  8. 

Fr.  Fu.  () :  332.     C.  9<i6. 

Angel.     Pau.  1:8.     C.  5.     115. 

R.&B.  3:  32.    C.  427.  151. 

One  Word,  4: 125.     C.  362. 

45- 

One  Word,  4 :  129.     C.  363. 

289. 

Fifine,  4  :  415.    C.  720.    154. 

Angel-brood.     Fra    Lippo,   4 :  81, 

C.  345. 
Angel-crowd.     Doctor,  6 :  181 .     C. 

906. 
Angel-guide.     R.  &  B.  3  :  81.     C. 

446. 
Angel-heads.    R.   &   B.  3:2.     C. 

415. 
Angel-help.    Red  Cott.  5:  81.     C. 

liSl. 
Angel-mates.    Inn  A.  5 :  265.     C 

782. 
Angel-song.     Straf.  1 :  189.     C.  73. 
Angel-sphere.    Boy  &  Ang.  2  :  240. 

C.  254.     268. 
Angel's.    R.&B.  3:273.     C.  523, 

79. 
Angels.    Para.  1 :  58.    C.  24.    206. 

R.&B. 3: 12.    C.419.    195. 

R.   &    B,  3:193.     C.  491, 

232. 

R.   &    B.  3:392.     C.  568. 

275. 
Angels'.    Worst,  4:171.     C.  379. 

291. 
Angelot.    Sor.  1:227,     C.  88. 
Angers.    R.  &  B.  3  :  118.     C.  461, 

30. 
Angle-niche.    Red  Cott.  5  :  66.     C. 

761. 
Angler-simile.     R.  &  B.  3  :  40.    C. 

430. 
Angry.    R.  &  B.  3 :  233,     C.  507. 
3. 

R.&B.  3:  261,  (7,518,  105, 

R.   &    B,  3:387.     C.  566, 

31- 


Anguish.     La    S.   6 :  65.     C.  854. 
248. 

299 


Animal 


INDEX 


Arch-deed 


ABhnal.    Cleon,  4:119.     C.   360.  I  ApoUos.    R.&B.3:50.     C.340, 
i66.  I     **•  - "      "    — 


Geo.  B.  D.6:322.    C.  962. 

Anne.    Sp"  V^:  ocS"  "^  C  151 
Annoy.    King  V.  1 :  ^'-i.     ^-  ^'^^• 

ASnij.    R.&  B.  3:183.     C.  487. 

Anofher.    Para.  1 :  50.     C.  21.    77- 

Para.  1 :  84.     C.  S4.     260 

Anotherguess.     R.  &     B.    3 :  1.->J. 

A^wt?!"   R.  &B.3:272.     C.  522. 

Inn\.5:290.    C.  792.    146. 

Ant-and-emraet.     An.   A.  o  :  lii. 

Ant-eater.     Sludge,    4:246.      L. 

408 
Anthology.    Bad  D.  II. 6:  397  ;  7: 

20.     C.  990.  „_   _ 

Anti-C»sar.    Imp.  Aug.  6 :  427 ;  7  : 

AS.rSir-E."i*E.a:«2.    C. 

549.     202.  ^    ^^n      /^ 

Anti-school.    An.  A.  5  :  159.     O 

A^ticipa^te.      Sor.  1:212.    C.  82. 
88 

Ari.A.  5  :  232.  C.  678.  115. 

Antieise.     Prince  H.    4:360.     C. 

6')3 
Antiphonary's.    Fra  Lippo,  4  :  77 

C.  343 


Apollyon's.      ChUde     R.    2:335. 

C  2S.S.     18. 
Appalling.      King    C.  1 :  408.     C. 

Aipeal.^^^ed  Cott.  5 :  53.    C.  756. 
282. 

-Don.  6:198.     C.  913.    94. 

Appealed.    R.   &   B.    3:266.     C. 

."yiO.    87.  _, 

Appearance.    R.  &  B.  3:44.     O. 

Appetites^'■R.   &  B.  3:398.     C. 

Applausl^°R.   &   B.   3:146.     C. 

472.     252.  -, 

Applausive.     R.  &B.3:280.     C. 

Appfe.    R.  &  B.  3:33.5.     C.  546. 

Appie-hlossom's.    Ger.   de  L.  6 : 

348.     C.  972.  ^      _, 

Apple-rind.     FU.  Bald.  5 :  3*9.    C. 

Apple-shaped.      Pan,   6 :  189.     C. 

•'09.  ^        -    -«      rf 

Apple-stem.    Red  Cott.  o :  oO.     O . 

Appled..   Red  Cott  5  :  50.    C.  755. 

Appointed.     Bean-St.  6:2*o.     O. 

943.     188.  „      ^ 

Appraise.     R.   &    B.  3:393.     C. 

Approbation.    R.  «S;B.  3:22.     C. 

4^'-i.      163. 
Anril      Pippa,  1:355.    C.  140.   43. 
^£!r.  Hornet.  A.  2:  46.     C.  179. 

Aprile.    Para.l:(K).     C.25 
Apron.    Inn  A.    5:2o2.     C.    til. 

Apt   Para,l:65.     C.27.    215. 


Antiphony.    A    Blot,  2:175.     C. 

90y        279. 

/b^tique-black.     St.  Prax.   4:90. 

C  .348 
Antiquity.    R.    &   B.   3:324.    C. 
.542.     100. 

Ari.    A.    5:167.      C.    655.  ^^^ra  x  ■  w.     ^.^..     --,• 

Antonio  Hgnatelli.    R.  &  B.  3  :  8.    Aptiy-ordered.    Ger.  de  L.  6 :  344 
aSiS    t^a,  2:374.     C.  3C^.  USitxam^.    R.  &  B.  3 :  105.  C. 


Apathetic.    Fifine,4:426.   C.  726. 

Ap4.    Old  Pict.  2 :  38.  C.  176.  240. 
Apes.     Luria,2:401.    C.  314.  I33. 

_ Prince  H.  4:470.     C.   09  <. 

168.  ^ 

Aphrodite.    Chris. -Eve,  4 :  16.    C. 

Apik^.    Fainily,  6:248.     C.  932. 

Apoilo-life.    Sor.  1:222.    C.  86. 


aS.    R.°&  B.  3:238.     C.  509. 

A?ch-cheat.    A  Blot,  2:163.     C. 
924 

.  Inn  A.  5  :  291.     C.  792. 

Arch-counsellor.     King  V.  1 :  370. 

Arch-cuiprit.    KingC.  1:403.     C. 

I     159  /-< 

Arch^eed.    A    Blot,  2:165.     C. 

225.     no. 


300 


Arch-demonstrator 


INDEX 


Arro'w-hand's 


Areh-demonstTator.    Para.    1 :  78. 

C.  31. 
Arch-device.     Eas.-Day,  4 :  39.    C 

329. 
Arch-enemy.    R.  &  B.  3  :  338.    C. 

547. 
Arch-foes.     Agam.  (5:21.     C.  838. 
Arch-fool.     Para.  1 :  91.     C.  :36. 
Arch-genethliac.     Para.  1 :  46.     C 

20. 
Arch-primaee.    Sor.  1 :  247.    C.  96. 
Arch-heretic.    Numph.  5  :  350.    C. 

814. 
Arch-hypocrite.    Bishop  B.  4  :  112. 

C.  357. 
Arch-iafamy.     Prince   H.   4  :  365. 

C.  695. 
Arch-knave.     Para.  1 :  86.     C.  35. 
Arch-moment.     Fust,  6  :  377.     C. 

983. 
Arch-object.     R.  &  B.  3  :  472.     C. 

599.     192. 
Arch-offender.    R.  «fe  B.  3  :  442. 

C.  588. 
Arch-pang.    R.  &  B,  3  :  369.     C. 

559. 
Arch-poet.      Ari.  A.   5 :  111.      C 

633. 
Arch-prank.     R.  &  B.  8  :  122.     C. 

462. 
Arch-prerogative.     R.  &  B.  3  :  17. 

C.  421.     2. 
Arch-rogue.     Ari,  A.  5:234.     C 

678. 
Arch-stroke.     R.  &  B.  3  :  467.     C. 

597. 
Arch-tempter.     R.  &   B.   3:365. 

C.  557.     99. 
Ai-ch-wise.    R.  &  B.  3:434.     C. 

585. 
Arch-wizard.     Druses,  2  :  134.     C 

212. 
Arch-word.      Fifine,    4:437.      C. 

732. 
Archway's.     R.  &  B.  3  :  171.     C. 

482.     99. 
Archelaos-like.      Ari.    A.   5  :  240. 

C.  681. 
Archer-troop.    Sor.  1 :  210.     C.  81. 
Archer's-gear,    Ari.  A.  5  :  184.    C 

662. 
Archetype.    Sor.  1 :  284.     C  110. 
Archimage.    Sor.  1 :  252.     C.  98. 
Arcot.     Clive,  6  :  156.     C.  894. 
Ardent.    R.  &  B.  3 :  337.     C.  547. 

"5. 
Aretine.     R.  &  B.  3  :  123,     C.  463. 

280. 


Arezzo.     R.  &  B.  3 :  12.     C.  419. 
Argued-off.    R.  &  B.  3 :  4(56.     C. 

597. 
Argument.    Straf.  1 :  132.     C.  51. 

235- 

R.&B.3:284.    C.527,  22. 

Chris.  Sm.  6  :  316,     C.  960. 

190. 
Argute.     Ari.  A.  5  :  133.     C.  642. 
Aion.     Fifine,  4  :  416.     C.  720. 
Aristocrat.     R.  &  B.  3  :  113.     C. 

459.     235. 
Aristotle.     R.   &   B.  3:290,      C. 

529.     118. 
Aristullos.     Ari.  A.   5  :  125.      C. 

638.     282. 
Arm.     Woman's,   2:23.      C.  171. 
82. 

A    Blot,    2:169.      C.  226. 

210. 

R.   &  B,  3:434,     C..585. 

80. 
Arm-in-arm.    Red  Cott.  5:7.     C. 

739. 
Arm-sweep.    Fust,  6:  378.    C.  984. 
Armament-conductors.     Agam.  6 : 

7.     0.832. 
Armed.     R.  &  B,  3  :  371.     C,  559. 

40. 
Armor.     R.  &  B.  3 :  156.     C.  476. 
234. 
R.«feB.3:367.    C.558.    74. 


Armor-adornments.      Gold    Hair, 

4  :  167.  _  C.  377._ 
Armor-wise.     Ari.  A.  5  :  192.     C 

6(55. 
Armory.     R.  &  B.  3  :  325.     C.  542, 

144. 
Army-leaders.     Agam.  6  :  19.     C 

837. 
Army-prophet.     Agam.  6:7.     C. 

832. 
Arouet.     Two  Poets,   6:99.      C 

867.     272. 
Arras-length.    Sor.  1  :  203.     C.  79. 
Array.    Sor.  1  :  223.     C.  86.     260. 
Arrears.       Prospice,     4 :  216.     C. 

395.     24. 
Arrides.     Plot-C.  6  :  265.     C.  939. 
Arrive.     Para.  1:40.    C.  17.    231. 
Arrogance.     R.  &  B.  3:400,     C. 
571.     68. 

Apol.  &  F.  6 :  287.     C.  949. 

292. 
Arrow-flash.    Red  Cott.  5  :  18.    C. 

743. 
Arrow-hand's.      A    Blot,    2:151. 

C.  219. 


301 


Arrow-loop 


INDEX 


Attempt 


Arrow-loop.    Sor.  1 :  304.     C.  118. 
Arrow-sliiiped.     Caliban,     4 :  210. 

C.  39:5. 
Art.     Old  Pict.  2:39.      C.   ITG. 
244. 

■ Red  Cott.  5  :  92.     C.  771. 

Fil.  Bald.  5  :  387.     C.  827. 

264. 

Fr.  Fu.  f) :  .330.     C.  905.     4. 

Bad  D.  III.  6  :  398  ;  7  :  21'. 

C.  990.     171. 
Art-laboratory.      Pacch.    f> :    318. 

C.  802. 
Art-mimetic.     Forgiv,  5  :  3G1.     C. 

818. 
Art-mistake.     Fifine,  4:402.     C. 

713. 
Art-stiidy.     The  Lady,     6:   40G; 

7  :  44.     C.  993. 
Art's.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  330.     C.  96.5. 

• Fr.  Fu.  6 :  3.31.  C.  90.5.   178. 

Art'sman.     Fust,  6 :  367.     C.  980. 
Arts.    R.   &   B.  3:472.     C.  599. 


22. 
Artemisia.    Bea 

58.     C.  996. 
Aitist.    Bishop  B.  4: 113, 


412;    7: 


Sig.   6 

C.  357. 

Cleon,  4:121.      C. 

183. 


Artist-gifts. 

360. 
Artist-list.     Abt  V.  4:183.      C. 

Artist-mind.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  333.     C. 

966. 
Artist-preference.     Red  Cott.   5  : 

92.     C.  771. 
Artist-ranks.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  332.     C. 

96(). 
Artist-soul.    Red  Cott.  5:48,     C. 

754. 
Artist-work.     Ger.  de   L.   6  :  344. 

C.  970. 
Artistry.     R.  &  B.  3  : 1.     C.  415. 
Artistry's.     R.  &  B.  3  :  438.     C. 
586,     116. 

Ger.  de  L.  6 :  344.     C.  970. 

114. 

Bea.  Sig.  6  :  412  ;  7 :  58.     C. 

996.     116. 
La  S.  6 :  57.     C.  851. 

Red  Cott.  5 :  16.     C. 


Arve 
Ash-avenue, 

742. 
Ash-bow 
Ash-gray 

338. 
Ash-tops, 

C.  999. 


Sor.  1 :  212.     C.  82. 
Karshish,   4 :  65. 


C. 


Flute-M,  6 :  420 ;  7:73. 


Ashes.    Ari.  A.  5:232.     C.  678. 

80. 
Ashamed.    Ari.  A.  5: 162.    C.653. 

91. 
Ashy-pale.     Para.  1 :  54.     C.  22. 
Ask.     Camel-D.  6:259.     C.  937, 

131. 
Askance.     Childe  R.   2:. 330.     C. 

287.     68. 
Red    Cott.   5:65.     C.    761. 

68. 
Asleep.    Red  Cott.  5:4.     C.  737. 

254. 

Lm  A.  5  :  277.    C.  787.    69, 

Asolo.     Sor.  1 :  254.     C.  98. 

Pippa,  1 :  327.     C.  129. 

Prol.  A.  6 :  390;  7  : 2.  C.  987. 

Asp.     Para.  1 :  84.     C.  34.     279. 
Aspire.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  341.    C.291. 

106. 
Sol.  &  B.  6:201.     C.  914. 

17- 
Aspiration.     R.  &  B.  3 :  200.     C. 

494.     232. 
Asquat.     Sor.  1 :  206.     C.  80. 
Asquint.     Sor.  1  :  236.     C.  91. 
Ass-tail.    R.  &  B.  3 :  ,322.     C.  .541. 
Assize.    Ned  B.  6 :  143.     C.  S,s7. 
Assurance.     Para.  1 :  47,      C.  20. 

34. 

La  S.  6 :  67.     C.  855.     287. 

Pillar,  0  :  268.    C.  940.    127. 

Reph.   6: -134;    7:100.      C. 

1005.     288. 
Astonishment.     R.    &   B.   3:339. 

C.  547.     22. 
Astray.      Straf ,    1 :  191,      C,    73. 


Fust,  6:381.    C.985. 

R.&B.  3:454.     C.592. 

Balau.  4 :  264.     C.  602. 
Forgiv.  5 :  358.     C.  817. 


285. 
Asvmptote. 

251. 
Atheist. 

184. 
Athens. 
Athlete. 

201. 
Atmosphere.      Chris.-Eve,  4  :  21. 

C.  323.     264. 
Atones.    Last  R,  2 :  280.     C.  268. 
80. 

R,   «fe  B.  3:241,     C.  510. 

144. 
Atroeiousest,    R.&B. 3: 461.     C. 


a 


595, 

Attain.    Reph.  6 :  434 ;  7 :  100, 

1004.     II. 
Attempt.    Luria,  2:403.    C.  315. 

184. 
302 


Attempt 


INDEX 


Attempt.    Ber  de  M.  G:  299.  C. 

953.    115. 
Attempts.     Ber.  de  M.  6 :  295,     C. 

952. 
Attentions.      Doctor,    6 :  184.     C 

907.     95. 
Audience-hour.    Colombe,  2 :  191. 

C.  235. 
Audience-time.     Colombe,  2:191. 

C.  235. 
Augnral.     Sor.  1 :  290.     C.  113. 
August-strippage.     Red  Cott.   5 : 

12.     C.  741. 
Auk.    Caliban,  4 :  208.     C.  392. 
Aura.     Fifine,  4  :  404.     C.  714. 
Aureole.     Para.  1 :  28.     C.  13. 
Aureole's.     Para.  1 :  63.     C  20. 
Austin.     A  Blot,  2  :  146.     C.  217. 
Australia-boimd.     Inn  A.  5 :  279. 

C.  787. 
Author.    R.  cS;  B.  3 :  292.     C.  530. 


8. 
R.   &  B.  3:343. 

292. 
Aii.    A.    5:238. 

206. 


C.  549. 
C.  680. 
C.  738. 


Author's.    Pietro,  6 :  179 

21. 
Authoritative.     R.   &  B,  3:167. 

C.  481.     167. 
Ari.    A.    5 :  126.      C.  639. 

125. 
Autochthon-brood.  Ari.  A.  5  :  123. 

C.  (]38. 
Autumn.     Para.    1:27.      C.    12. 

279. 

Para.  1 :  44.     C.  19.     141, 

Sor.  1:209.     C.  81.     191. 

Saul,  2  :  51.     C.  181.     246. 

By  Fire.  2  :  59.    C.  185.     66. 

Soul's  Tr.  2  :  343.     C.  291. 

237. 
R.   &   B.  3:93,       C.  451. 

280. 
R.   &   B.  3:291.     C.  530. 

133- 
J.    Lee,    4:161.      C.   375. 

227. 
Auxiliary.    Fifine,  4:418.    C.  721. 

282. 
Avail.      Inn  A.   5:297.      C.   795. 

193. 
Avails.      After,    2:87.      C.    194. 

47- 

Ber.  de  M.  6 :  300.     C.  954. 

246. 
Ave-beU.    Stat.  «&  B.  2 :  323.     C. 
284, 


Baby-rhymes 
Agam.    6 :  46. 


Avenging-ghost. 

C.  847. 
Awake.     R.  &  B.  3 :  344.     C.  550. 

160. 
Awakes.    Fhght,2:304.     C.  277. 

Stat.'  &  B.  2  :  322.     C.  284. 

141. 

R.  ifeB.3:23G.    C.  508.  57. 

Award.    R.  &  B,  3 :  170,     C,  4*2. 

131- 
Awe,     Two  Poets,  6:97.    C.  867. 
214. 

Prol.  A.  6  :  390 ;    7  :  2.      C. 

987.     223. 
Awe-checked.    Agam.  6:44.      C. 

846. 
Awe-stricken.      R.    &   B.   3:368. 

C  558.     277. 
Awe-struck.      Luria,  2 :  371.      C. 
303.     52. 

R.  &  B.  3  :  29.     C.  42G. 

R.   &   B.   3:195.     C.  492. 

272. 

Joch.  6 :  212.     C.  819. 

Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  324.    C.  963. 

42. 
Axe.    R.   &  B.   3:474.     C.  600. 

256. 
Axe-edge.     Prince  H.  4 :  361.     C 

693. 
Axe-haft.     Joch.  6  :  223.     C.  923. 
Ayoob.     Druses,  2 :  99.     C.  198. 
Azzo.    Sor,  1 :  195,     C.  76, 


Baaed.    R.   &  B.  3:97.     C.  452. 

97- 
Babe,    R.  &  B,  3 :  162,     C.  478. 
214. 

Ber.  de  M.  6  :  295,     C.  952. 

264. 
Babes.     R.  &  B.  3  :  ,387.     C.  566. 

136. 
Babv-birth.     Two  Poets,  6  :  92.  C. 

865. 
Baby-dauphins.    Two  Poets,  6  :  89. 

C.  863. 
Baby-house.    Red  Cott.  5  :  51.     C 

755. 
Baby-hope.     Red  Cott.  5  :  79,     C. 

7(;6. 

Baby-prattle,    Chris.-Eve,    4 :  16. 

C.  322. 
Babv-rhymes.     Sludge,  4 :  235.    C. 

403. 


303 


Baby-softness  INDEX  Banjo-Byron 

Baignoire-edge.    Red  Cott.  5 :  23. 
C.  74.5. 


BaLy-softness.    R.   &    B.  3:170. 

C.  4H4.     31. 
Baby-work.    Ari.   A.   5:234.     C. 

678. 
Bacchus-prompted.    Apol.    &  F. 

6 :  289.     C.  950. 
Back.     Ger.  de  L.  6  :  347.     C.  972. 
189. 

Epil.  A.  6  :  440 ;  7  :  113.     C. 

1007.     265. 
Back-again-beaten.    Agam.  6 :  16. 

C.  s:!ti. 
Back-bringing.     Agam.  6 :  37.     C 

844. 
Back-driven.     Ber.  de  M.  6 :  295. 

C.  952.     82. 
Back-fin.     Druses,  2 :  133.     C.  212. 
Back-flowing.    Ari.  A.  5:201.    C. 

mi. 

Back-hair.    Red  Cott.  5 :  21.     C. 

744.     95. 
Back-handed.     Count    G.    2:237. 

C.  253. 
Back-revenging.    Agam.  6 :  26.    C 

ivlO. 

Back-seats.  _  Para.  1 :  101.     C.  40. 
Back-shiinking.     Para.  1 :  47.     C. 

20. 
Back-stretch.    Ari.  A.  5 :  144.    C. 

(546. 
Back-swing.    R.&B.  3:466.     C. 

597. 
Back-weight.    Soul's    Tr.    2:345. 

C.  292. 
Backs.     Geo.B.  D.6:323.    C.963. 

239. 
Backbone-thought.     R.    &   B.   3: 

117.     C.  4(iO.     235. 
Backward-darting.      Agam.    6 :  7. 

C.  833. 
Backward-turning.     Agam.  6 :  24. 

C.  839. 
Bactrian.     Death  in  D.  4 :  192.    C. 

386. 
Bad.    R.   &    B.   3:192.     C.  490. 
96. 

Doctor,    6:181.       C.    906. 

49 


Bad-wave-outbreak.   Agam.  6 :  21. 

C.  838. 
Badger.     Caliban,  4 :  208.     C.  392. 
Badger-like.     Inn  A.   5:267.     C. 

783. 
Baffled.    R.  &  B.  3: 174.     C.  483. 
142. 

Rudel,  4:123.    C.  361.    79. 

Ba?.    R.  &    B.  3:222.     C.  503. 


Baiting.    R.  &  B.  3:61.     C.  438. 

22. 
Baker-wives.    Ari.  A.  5: 172.     C. 

657. 
Bakis-prophecy.    Ari.   A.  5 :  235. 

C.  (J79. 
Balaam-like.     At  the   M.   5:334. 

C.  «08.     19. 
Baladine's.      In   a  B.  4:140.     C. 

3(;7. 

Balance-holder.    Agam.  6:15.    C 

836. 
Balance-tongue.    R.   &  B.  3:90. 

C.  449. 
Balaustion.     Balau.4:267.  C.604. 

Ari.  A.  5 :  99.     C.  628. 

Bald-head.     Aii.    A.    5:  124.     C. 


R.   &  B.  3:287.     C. 


6:i8. 
Baldeschi. 

528. 
Baldinueci's.    Bea.  Sig.  6 :  412 ;  7 : 

58.     C.  9f)6. 
Balfour.    Straf.  1 :  188.     C.  72. 
Balked.     App.    Fail.    4:257.     C. 

412.     24. 
Balkis.    !Sol.  &  B.  6 :  200.     C.  913. 

230. 
Ball.    R.&B.  3: 31.     C.426.  153. 
Ball-business.    Inn  A.  5:  310.     G. 

800. 
Ball-convexity.    Red  Cott.  5:17. 

C.  742. 
Ball-experience.      Inn    A.   5 :  249. 

C.  776. 
BaUad-rhyme.    Sor.  1 :  229.    C.  89. 
Ballad-sheet.     R.  &B.  3:  444.    C. 

5.S9. 
BaUot-bean.    Ari.  A.  5 :  105.     C. 

6:30. 
Balm.      Herv^,  5:357.      C.  816. 

106. 
Balm-shed,    Sor.  1:314.     C.  122. 
Balsam-bloom.      Ari.    A.    5:114. 

C.  6:V4. 
Balsam-tree.     R.  &  B.  3 :  278.     C. 

525. 
Baluster-rope.    Fifine,  4:  431. 

728. 
Bang- whang-whang.   Up  —  Down, 

2 :  :30.     C.  174. 
Banished.     R.  &   B.  3:155.      C. 

476.     13. 
Banquet-band.      Ari.    A.    5 :  113. 

C.  633. 
Banjo-Byron.    Paech.  5:330.     C. 

807. 
304 


C. 


Banker-king 


IXDEX 


Bauble-world 


Banker-king.    R.  &B.3:114.    C. 

•ij!».     275. 
Banker's-book.     Red  Cott.  5:49. 

C.  755. 
Banner-poles.     Clive,   6:156.      C. 

894. 
Banquet-glow.       Ari.    A.    5 :  130. 

C.  (J40. 
Banquet-rooms.     Sor,  1 :  200.     C 

77. 
Baptism.     R.   &   B.   3:102.      C. 

478.     214. 
Bar.     Prince  H.  4:356.     C.  692. 

64. 
Barberess.     R.  &  B.  3: 116.     C. 

460. 
Bard.    Sor.  1:234,     C.  91.     207. 
Two  Poets,  6 :  111.     C.  872. 

3- 

Joch.  6:213.     C.  919.     7. 

Bard-craft.    Sor.  1 :  231.     C.  90. 
Bard^s.     Sor.  1 :  252.     C.  98._    65. 
Bard's-chanipion.    Ari.  A.  5: 151. 

C.  648. 
Bare-backed.      R.   &    B.   3:147. 

C.  472. 
Bare-legged.      Englishra.    2 :  258. 

C.  260. 
Bare-walled.      Lovers'    Q.    2 :  31. 

c.  173. 

Bargain-driver.      Pied    Piper,    2: 

28(>.     C.  270. 
Baring.       Chris.-Eve,    4:15.      C. 

321.     264. 
Barley.     Pietro,  6 :  170.      C.   900. 

247. 
Barley-bread.      R.    &  B.   3:345. 

C.  550. 
Barley-soup.      Two  Cam.   6:260. 

C.  937. 
Barley-spikes.      Sor.    1:318.      C. 

124. 
Barley-throw.     Ari.  A.  5 :  175.    C. 

(J58. 
Barnurn.     Sludge,  4 :  229.    C.  400. 
Barrack-bulk.      R.  &   B.  3:431. 

C.  583. 
Barrel.     Fust,  6: 382.    C.986.    19. 
Barrel-droppings.     Fra  Lippo,  4: 

77.     C.  3"43. 
Barrier-growth.     R.  &  B.  3:214. 

C.  499.     208. 
Barrier-g^arder.     King  V.  1 :  389. 

C.  153. 
Barrow-load.      Prince   H.   4 :  333, 

C.  683. 
Barry's.    Inn  A,  5:  268,     C,  783, 


Bartolus-cum-Baldo.    R.  ft  B.  3: 

46(;.     C.  597. 
Bascio,  Matteo  da.     Ponte  A.  6: 

408  ;  7 :  48.     C.  994. 
Basement.      Death  in   D.  4 :  197. 

C.  388.     81. 
Basement-ledge.     R.    &   B.   3:2. 

C.  415. 
Baseness.    Para.  1 :  84.    C  34.  54. 
Bashful.     R.  &B.  3:24.     C.-424. 

82. 
Bass-relief.    R.&B.  3:341.     C. 

548. 
Basset-table.    R.  &  B.  3: 107.     C. 

456. 
Bastard-babe.    R.  &  B.  3: 160.  C. 

478. 
Bastard-slip.    Ari.  A.  5 :  183.     C. 

661. 
Bat.     Balau.  4 :  303.   C.  618.     177. 
Bat-blind.     Ari.    A.    5 :  171.      C. 

657. 
Bat-fowling.    Red  Cott.  5 :  33.     C. 

748. 
Bat-like.     R.&B. 3: 151.     C.  474. 

196. 
Bat-wings.     Ponte  A.  6:  410;  7:  52. 

C.  995. 
Bateleurs.     Fifine,4:384.     C.  702. 
Bath-drudge.     Lnp.  Aug.  6:428; 

7 :  88.     C.  1002. 
Bath-pool.     La  S.  6:57.     C.  850. 
Bath-vase.     Agam.  6:47.     C  847. 
Bathing-place.     Red  Cott.  5:1.  C. 

737.     173. 
Battery-smokes.     Licident,  2 :  231. 

C.  251. 
Battle.     Red  Cott.  5:48.     C.  754. 
II. 

Two  Poets,  6 :  107.     C.  871. 

II. 

Ber.  de  M.  6 :  296.     C.  952. 

183. 
Battle-ardors,    Luria,  2:392.     C. 

311. 
Battle-dawn.       Chris.-Eve,    4:28. 

C.  32(i. 
Battle-dew.     Balau.     4:314.      C. 

()22. 
Battle-element.     Luria,  2 :  392.  C. 

311. 
Battle-signal's.    Luria,  2 :  374.     C 

304. 
Bauble-sword.    R.   &   B.    3:164. 

C.  479. 
Bauble-world.    CaUban,  4 :  210.  C. 

393. 


305 


Baubles 


Baubl^.     Caliban,  4:  210.    C.393. 

229. 
Bavins.    Her.    Trag.    2:314.     C. 

280, 
Bay.    Sor.  1 :  307.     C.  120.    274. 

Ari.  A.  5:  105.    C.  6:30.  176. 

Geo.  B,  D.  (i :  321.     C.  9(J2. 

75. 
Bay-filleted.     Pippa,     1:344.     C. 

135. 
Bay-tree.     Chris.  Sm.   6 :  316.     C. 

9G0.     227. 
Baybloom-fed.     Ari.  A.  5:147.  C. 

647. 
Bazzi.     Pacch.  5 :  318.     C.  802. 
Bazzi's.     Fifine,  4:400.     C.  711. 
Be.     Ger.  de  L.  6:352.     C.  974. 

55- 
Be-flattered.     Pietro,    6:174.     C. 

902. 
Be-friended.    Pietro,    6 :  174.     C. 

902. 
Be-garlanded.    Balau.  4 :  307.     C. 

619. 
Be-lovered.     Pietro,     6 :  174.      C. 

*X)2. 
Be-praised.     Luria,      2 :  370.      C. 

302. 
Beacon,    Ari.  A.  5:117.     C.  635. 

182. 
Beacon-light.     Straf .     1 :  178.      C. 

68.     37. 
Beacon-like.     La    S.    6: 74.      C. 

8.58. 
Beacon-tip.    R.   &  B.  3:74.     C. 

443.     102. 
Bead-blooms.     Fifine,   4:408.     C. 

716. 
Beads.    Pved  Cott.  5:.30.     C.  747. 

134. 
Beak.    Pt.   &  B.  3:40.     C.   430. 

Beak-nosed.     R.  &B.  3:18.     C. 

421.     142. 
Beamy.    R.&B.  3:3.33.     C.  545. 

Wanting,    6:193.     C.    911. 

85. 
Bean-feast.    Bean-F.  6 :  404  ;  7 :  38. 

C.  993. 
Bean-streak.    Bean-St.  6 :  274,    C 

943. 
Bean-throw.    Bean-St.  6 :  272.    C. 

942.    66. 
Beanstalk-rungs,     R.  &  B.  3 :  31. 

C.  426.     106. 
Bear.    R,   &    B,    3:36,     C.  428. 

III. 


IXDEX 
Bear 


Beauty 

3:260.     C.  517. 
C.  523. 


R.  &  B. 
162. 
R.  &    B.  3:273. 

253. 

J.  Lee,  4 :  155.    C.  .374.  140. 

Why.  6 :  388.     C.  948.     78. 

Bearded.     Ger.  de  L.  6:344.     C. 

971.     67. 
BearcUess.     R.   &    B.   3:434,     C. 

.585.    245. 
Beast.    R.  &  B.   3:97.     C.  452, 
267. 

Red    Cott.   5 :  72.     C.   763. 

178. 
Joch.  6:222.     C.922.     219. 


Beast-fashion.    Ari.  A.  5 :  140.  C. 

644. 
Beast-fellowship.     R.  &  B.  3:45. 

C.  432. 
Beast-litter.      Pacch.     5:324.     C. 

804. 
Beast-nature.     Inn  A.  5 :  283.     C. 
789.     14. 

Inn  A.  5 :  :JOS.     C.  799. 

Beast-skins.     Ger.   de    L.   6 :  350. 

C.  973. 
Beast's.   Two  Poets,  6 :  91.   C.864. 

102. 
Beastliness.     R.  &  B.  3:58.     C. 

437.     133. 
Beatitude.     Red  Cott.  5:81.     C. 

767.     228. 
Beatrice,  Countess.     R.  &  B.  3: 

147.     C.  472. 
Beatrice-wife.     Bea.  Sig.  6:415; 

7:62.     C.  997. 
Beaiiteously-eddying.    Ari.  A.  5: 

189.     C.  664. 
Beautiful.     R.  &  B.  3 :  392.     C, 
568.    34- 

Dan.  Bar.  6 :  .303.     C.  955. 

96. 
Beauty.   Para.  1 :  120.    C  48.    194. 

Sor.  1 :  312.     C.  122.     66. 

Pretty  W.  2:  78.      C.  191. 

164. 

Guard.  Ang.  2  :  89.     C.  194. 

285. 

Stat.  &  B.  2:  .326.     C.  285. 

80. 
Soul's  Tr.  2:357.     C.  297. 


R.&B. 3: 191.    C.490.   91. 
R.   &  B,  3:394.     C.  568. 

128. 
Fifine,  4:400.    C.  711.    162. 
Ari.  A.  5: 100.    C.  629.  263. 
Ari,  A.  5:110.   C.  633,   70. 


306 


Beauty 


INDEX 


Best 


Beauty.  Inn  A.  5:  258.  C.  779.  240. 

^"Foiffiv.SiaU.   C.  8i;».    146. 

Shah  A.  6:  24:5.    dm).    15. 

•  Chris.  Sm.  (i:  317.     C.  DGl. 

158.     242. 

Prol.  A.  0:390;   7:2.      C. 

987.     120. 
Beauty-beam.      R.   &   B.   3:. 378. 

C.  562. 
Bed-foot.    Doctor,  6:183.    C.  907. 
Bed-ftirniture.    Fra  Lippo,  4 :  75. 

C.  342. 
Bed-keeping.     Agam.   G :  45.      C. 

840. 
Bed-ridden.    Bishop  B.  4:  97.    C. 

351. 
Beddoes.    Two  Poets,  6:  111.     C. 

872. 
Bedropped.    Sor.  1:  268.     C.  104. 
Bee.    Para.  1:111.     C.  44.     196. 

R.   &   B.   3:290.     C.   529. 

116. 
Bee-bird.     Eas.-Day,    4 :  49. 


333. 
Bee-like.    Ger.  de  L.  6:34(3. 

971.     259. 
Beehive-edge.    R.  &  B.  3: 1. 

414.     271. 
Beethoven.     R.&B.  3:477. 
(iOl.     168. 

Pacch.  5 :  330.     C.  806. 

Beetle-brow.     Balau.  4 :  3UG. 


C. 

C.   473. 
C.  266. 

c. 


619. 
Beg.    R.   &  B.   3:148. 

25.  ^    . 

Beggar.     Twins,  2 :  276. 

7- 
Beggar-cheat.    Pippa.  1 :  356 

140. 
Beggar-child.     Tray,   6:142.      C. 

887. 
Beggar-taint.    Ari.  A.  5 :  164.     C 

654. 
Beggar-world.   Ari.  A.  5 :  122.    C. 

637.     133. 
Beginning.     Para.  1 :  107.     C.  43. 
274. 

Red   Cott.   5:22.      C.   744. 

182. 

Chris.  Sm.  6:  317.     C.  961. 

62. 

Ger.  de  L.  6:  a52.     C.  974. 

49.     141- 
Behold.    Chris.-Eve,4:9.    C.319. 

93. 
Belial's.  Som.2:13.    C.168.    174. 
Belied.    R.  &  B.  3:  258.     C.  517. 

204. 


Belief.    Straf.  1:178.    C.68.   208. 

Liiria,  2:;3(i6.    C.  yA)l.   207. 

R.  &B.3:147.    C.  472.    51. 

Chris.-Eve,  4 :  14.     C.  321. 

264. 
Believe.     R.  &  B.  3:  224.     C.  504. 
256. 

Death  in  D.  4 :  194.     C.  387. 

242. 
BeUeves.     R.   <Sc   B.  3:367.      C. 
558.     270. 

Inn  A.  5:  265.    C.  782.   282. 

Bell.     R.   &   B.   3:36(5.      C.  557. 

188. 
Bell-tower.     Old  Pict.  2 :  37.      C. 

176. 
Bells.   R.&B.3:292.    C.rm.   31. 
BeUed.      Two   Poets,  6:  110.      C. 

872.     202. 
Belle  Aurore.     Herv^,  5 :  358.     C- 

816. 
Beloved.     Red    Cott.    5 :  45.      C. 

753.     67. 
Below-ground.     R.   &   B.   3:175. 

C.  484. 
Beltran.     The  Confess.  2 :  10.     C. 

169. 
Bema-eloud.     Ari.  A.  5 :  101.     C. 

629. 
Benibo's.    R.  &  B.  3 :  226.    C.  504. 
Ben  Ezra.    Holv-C.  2 :  318.    C.  282. 
Bench.    R.  &  B.  3:  285.     C.  527. 
255. 

Don.  6:195.     C  911.     19. 

Beneath.    Sor.  1:. 31.3.    0.122.    i. 

Worst,  4:172.    C.  379.    74.' 

Benediction.     R.  &  B.  3:32.     C. 

427.     252. 
Benefic.     Red  Cott.  5 :  22.     C.  744. 
Beneficence.     Ber.   de  M.  6 :  298. 

C.  953.     155. 
Benefits.   Para.  1:83.    C.  34.    155. 
Benicia  Boy.    Sludge,  4:  251.     C. 

410. 
Bent.     R.  &  B.  3:  424.     C.  581. 

Ben  Ezra,  4:  190.     C.  :5>5. 

Bernini's.     R.  &  B.  3 :  21.     C.  422. 

Berold.     Fhght,  2 :  292.     C.  272. 

Berthold.      Colombe,   2:205.      C. 


240. 
Bespate.     Childe  R.  2:333.     C. 

2.S,S. 
Besprent.    Sor.  1 :  216.     C.  84. 
Best.    Pippa,  1 :  331.    C.  IM.    143. 

Pippa,  1 :  365.     C.  144.     7. 

Soul's  Tr.  2:339.     C.  290. 

102. 

R.&B.3:391,    C.567,   18. 


307 


Best 


IXDEX 


Bitter-sw^eetling 


Best.    Bishop  B.  4:100.     C.  332. 

204. 
Ben   Ezra,  4 :  185.     C.  383. 

176. 

Baku.  4 :  29.5.    C.  614.   280. 

Fifine,  4 :  415.    C.  720.    206. 

Red  Cott.  5:4.  C.  738.  172. 

LaS.(i:71.     C.  857.     82. 

Bestialize.    R.  «fe  B.  3 :  79.    C.  445. 

98. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  429.    C.  583,  80. 

Bethany.      Karshish,    4 :  64.      C. 

3:i8. 
Betimes.    R.  &  B.  3:  68,     C.  441. 

7. 
Betray.      Mar.    Rel.    6:120.      C. 

876.  131. 

Betrays.     Numph.  5:350.    C  813, 

228, 
Betrayed.    R.  &  B.  3:  5.     C.  416. 

118. 
Betrothal.     Mar.  Rel.  6: 122.     C. 

877.  48. 

Better.     Para.  1 :  115.    C.  45.    38. 

Straf .  1 :  IW,.     C.  63.     143. 

Waring.  2 :  274.  C.  2m.  202. 

Soul's  Tr.  2:. 350,     C.  294, 

125. 
Soul's  Tr.  2:355.     C.  297, 

95- 

R.&B.  3:274.    C.  52.3.  84. 

Better-tempered.   Para.  1 :  121,  C. 

48. 
Between-whiles.     R.  &  B.  3:74. 

C.  443. 
Be^-ravs.     Ari.  A.  5 : 1.56.     C.  651. 
Beyond.     Epil.  Bean  -  St.    6:282. 

0.946.     59. 
Bible-oath.   Pietro,  6 :  177.    C.  904. 
Bic^.     Bea.  Sig.  6 :  415  ;  7 :  63.     C. 

'.m. 

Bicker.     Druses,  2:101.     C.  199. 
Bides.    Caliban,   4:210.      C.   393. 

19. 
Bier.    Joch.  6:215.      C.  920.     14. 
Big.   FraLippo,  4:79.    C.  .344.  57. 
Big-baby-fashion.   Red  Cott.  5 :  31. 

C.  748. 
Big-browed.    R.  &  B.  3:41.     C. 

4:30. 

Big-hearted.   Dan.  Bar.  6 :  308.    C. 

957. 
Big-legged.    Sludge,    4:250.      C. 

409. 
BUious.    R.  &  B.  3: 153,     C,  475, 

14. 
Billow-borne,    R,  &B,3:454.    C. 

593. 


Billow -like.   Balau.4:310.  C.  621. 
Billowy-bosomed.     Last  R.  2 :  279, 

C.  2tJ7. 
Binds.     Para.  1 :  43.     C.  18.     65, 
Bird.     Para.  1 :  40.     C.  17.     9. 

Miscon.  2 :  73.     C.  189.     20. 

R.&B. 3:  32.   C.427.    151. 

Andrea,  4:85.  0.347.   272. 

Bird-bee-and-squirrel.     Inn  A,  5: 

270.     C.  784. 
Bird-like.     Para.  1 :  62.     C.  25. 
R.&B.  3:274.     C.  .523. 


Bird-mates.  Joch.  6:  220.  C.  f>22. 
Bird-shriek.  Agam.  6 :  5.  C.  832. 
Bird-slaying.      Agam.   6:19,      C. 

8.37. 
Bird's-nest.    R.&B.  3:363.     C. 

556. 
Birds.     Para.  1:40.     C.  17.     231, 
Pippa.  1 :  ;i(i4.    C.  144.    283. 


Birds'-chirp.     Sor.  1 :  218,     C.  84. 
Birth.    R.   &   B.  3:34.     C.   428. 

153. 
R.   &  B.  3:275.     C.  524. 


94. 
Birth-blush.     Flute-M.  6:423;  7: 

79.     C.  lUOO. 
Birth-night.    R,  &  B.  3:  279.     C. 

525. 
Birth-star.      Mihrab,   6:254.      C. 

ir.io. 

Birth-throe.    La  S.  6 :  66.     C.  855. 

147- 
Birth-town.    R.&B.  3:194.     C. 

491. 
Birthday-banquet.    R.  &  B.  3 :  26. 

C.  425. 
Birthnight-eve.     R.  &  B.  3:373. 

C.  560. 
Birthright-license.   R,  &  B,  3 :  145. 

C.  472. 
Bishop's-revenue.     R.  &  B.  3 :  194. 

C.  491. 
Bismarck.     Red   Cott.   5:  75.     C. 

7(i4. 
Bistre-length.    Fifine,  4:  388.     C. 

704. 
Bite-beast.     Agam.  6:. 37.     C  844. 
Bites.     R.  &  B.  3:232.     C.  507. 

144- 
Caliban.      4:210.      C.  393, 

19. 
Bitten.     Para.  1:116.    C.46.    217. 
Bitter.  Pippa,  1 :  ;j49.  C.  137.  171. 
Lost    ]^Iis.   2:20.      C.    17U. 

177, 
Bitter-sweetling.    Sor.  1 :  231,    C 
89,     21, 


308 


Bitters 


Bitters.    King  V.  1 :  389.     C.  15:5. 

255. 
Bitterness.   A  Blot,  2 : 1.57.    0.222. 
180. 

Luria,  2:.376.    (7.305.    59. 

Blab.     Bad  D.  IV.  6:  39<J;  7:  25. 

C.  991.     90. 
Blabs.     Para.  1 :  63.     C.  2C.     47. 
Black.    K.  &  B.  3:22.     C.  423. 
102. 

R.  ifeB.3:86.    C.MS.   276. 

R.&B.  3:161.    0.478.    7. 

R.&B.3:166.    C.  480.   20. 

R.  &    B.  3:  367.      C.  558. 

270. 

Pan,  6: 188.     C.  909.     187. 

Black-balled.     Dan.  Bar.   6:310. 

C.  958. 
Black-barred.     Flight,  2 :  296.     C. 

273. 
Black-bearded.  Druses,  2: 135.  C 

213. 
Black-blooded.       Inn    A.    5 :  276. 

C.  78().     103.  _ 
Black-blue.      Pippa,    1 :  336.      C. 

132. 
Black-clotted.    Agam.  6 :  14.     C. 

835. 
Black-door.     Pietro,     6:179.      C. 

905. 
Black-dressed.     Red   Cott.   5:21. 

C.  744. 
Black-eyed.      Two  Poets,  6:108. 

C.  871. 
Black-haired.     R.  &B.  3:18.     C. 

421.     142. 
Black-hatted.    R.  &  B.  3:  30.    C. 

426. 
Black-hooded.    R.  &.  B.  3 :  30.  C. 

42(i. 
Black-homed.     Agam.   6 :  34.     C. 

842. 
Black-muzzled.     Ned    B.    6:150. 

C.  891. 
Black-panelled.     R.   &    B.   3:24. 

C.  424.     224. 
Black-point.    Colombe,  2 :  194.    C. 

23(). 
Black-stoled.    Balau.   4:309.     C. 

620. 
Black-swoUen.    Balau.  4:314.    C. 

622. 
Black-wing'd.     Balau.  4:281.     C. 

609. 
Blackish-gray.    By  Fu-e.  2 :  (51.  C. 

186. 
Blackness.    R.   &    B.  3:12.     C. 

419.    5. 


INDEX 
Blade 


Blind 

C.  277. 
C.  284. 


Flight,   2:. 305. 

232. 
Stat.  &  B.  2:  .332. 

153. 
Blake.     Red  Cott.  5:  92.     C.  771. 
Blame.     R.  &  B.  3 :  22,  C.  423.  83. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  98.     C.  453.     19. 

R.«SrB.  3:121.  C.462.  219. 

R.    &    B.   3:244.     C.   511. 

235- 
R.   &   B.    3:389.     C.   5()6. 

192. 
R.    &    B.    3:4:«3.     C.   586. 

232. 

J.  Lee,  4 :  156.     C.  374.  154. 

St.   Mart.   5:352.     C.   814. 

99. 
Bean-  St.   6 :  277.     C.     944. 

264. 
Chas.    A.   6:357.     C.   975. 

77. 
Bad.    D.  IV.  6 :  398  ;  7 :  23. 

C.  990.     42. 
Blameworthy.      Ari.     A.     5 :  168. 

C.  655.     192. 
Blank.     Para.  1 :  101.    C.  40.   172. 

Straf .  1 :  155.     C.  5<l.     115. 

King    C.    1:394.     C.    155. 

182. 
Red    Cott.  5:21.     C.   744. 

Wanting,    6:193.     C.   911. 

85. 
Flute-M.   6 :  421 ;  7 :  74.     C. 

999.     290. 
Blaze.     Para.  1:61.     C  25.     141. 

Luria,  2 :  363.     C.  300.  162. 

Blazed.     R.  &B.  3:91.     C.  450. 

238. 
Bleak.     Crist.    &   M.   6:20.3.     C. 

915.     240. 
Bleai-eyed.     R.    &   B.   3:35.     C. 

428. 
Blessed.    Red  Cott.  5: 18.    C.  743. 

44- 
Ber.  de  M.  6:  302.     C.  955. 

140. 
Blessing.    Inn  A.  5:  314.     C.  801. 

16. 

Joch.  6 :  221.     C.  922.     273, 

Blew.     Two  Poets,  6:111.   C.  872. 

85. 
Blind.     Para.  1 :  80.     C.  32.     142. 

Para.  1 :  120.     C.  47.     191. 

Sor.  1 :  241.     C.  93.     217. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  35.    C.  428.  199. 

R.   &  B.  3:229.     C.    505. 

83. 


309 


Blind  INDEX 


Blind.     R.  &  B.  3:392,     C.  568. 

35- 
Blinds.    Para.  1 :  80.     C.  32.    3. 
Blindfold.    R.    &    B.   3:92.     C. 

450.    40. 
Blinding-bright.    Red  Cott.  5 :  50. 

Blindness.    R.   &  B.   3:387,     C. 

r>m.    262, 

Bliukard.    Sor.  1 :  284.     C.  111. 
Bliss.     Saul,  2:57.     C.  184.     207. 

By  Fire.  2 :  (35.     C.  187.  38. 

R.    &    B.   3:275.     C.   524. 

85. 

Joch.  6 :  230.     C.  926.     227. 

Block-work.     Pippa,    1 :  343.      C. 

135. 
Blondin.     Don.  6:197.     C.  912. 
Blood.     Pan.  1 :  22.     C.  10.     30. 

Up  —  Down,  2 :  33.     C.  174. 

265. 

Glove,  2 :  248.     C.  257.    44- 

R.   &    B.   3:77.     C.     444. 

226. 

Eas.-Day,     4:45.     C.    331. 

79- 

Ari.  A.  5 : 1.39.     C.  644.  68. 

■ Doctor,     6 :  183.      C.     907. 

114. 
Blood-avenger.     An.    A.     5:215. 

C.  672. 
Blood-besprinkler.    Agam.    6 :  32. 

C.  842. 
Blood-bright.     R.   and    B.    3:14. 

C.  420.     140. 
Blood-drenched.     R.  &  B.  3:454. 

C.  592. 
Blood-dripping.    Agam.  6:40.    C. 

845. 
Blood-flustered.     R.  &  B.  3:375. 

C.  561. 
Blood-heat.    Old  Pict.  2 :  44.     C. 

178.     261. 
Blood-imbrued.      Inn    A.    5:290. 

C.  792. 
Blood-ofFerings.     Oh  Love  !  6 :  386. 

C.  874. 
Blood-plashed.    Echet.  6 :  154.    C. 

Blood-pulse.    R.  &  B.  3: 102.     C. 

454. 
Blood-red.    R.   &    B.    3:47.     C. 
432.     230. 

• R.  &  B.  3 :  225.     C.  504. 

Blood-red-bright.      Ivkn,     6:141. 

C.  886. 
Blood-smutch.    R.  &B.3:8.     C. 

417, 


Blue-eyed 

Ivkn,  6:138.  C. 
C. 
C. 


Blood-snake. 

884. 
Blood-spatter.     Agam.   6:43. 

84(i. 
Blood-stain.    R.   &  B.   3:7. 

417.     31. 
Blood-streaked.    Numph.    5 :  347. 

C.     813. 
Blood-sympathy.     R.  &  B.  3 :  404. 

C.  572.     17. 
Blood-thimied.      Ari.    A.    5 :  142. 

C.  645. 
Blood-value.    Mul^y.    5 : 1(34.     C. 

897. 
Blood-warmth.     Ari.    A.    5:104. 

C.  6:30.     236. 
Blood-worms.    Sor.  1 :  216.    C.  84. 
Bloodies.    R.  &  B.  3 :  68.     C.  441. 

252. 
Bloom.    R.  &  B.  3:428.     C.  582, 
211. 

Joch.  6:  228.     C.  925.     29. 

Bloom-flinders.    Sor.     1:252.     C. 

98. 
Blossom-burst.    R.   &   B.   3:168, 

C.  481.     189. 
Blossom-flake.    Inn  A.  5:  281.    C. 

788. 
Blossom-month,   Straf .  1 :  174.    C 

67. 
Blot.    LostL.2:4,     C.  KM.    142. 
Blotting.    R.&B.3:123.    C.  463. 

107. 
Blottings.     Para.    1:47.      C.    20. 

135. 
Blougram.     Bishop  B.  4: 92.     C. 

.349. 
Blow!    Glove,  2:250.  C.257.  104. 

R.   &  B.  3:427.     C.  582, 

III. 

Iv^n,  6:1.34.     C.  883.    245. 

Blow-ball.     R.   &   B.   3:217.     C, 

500.     256. 
Blow-beU-down.  Fifine,  4:  386.  C. 

703. 
Blows.     Para.  1 :  73.     C.  30.    278. 
Blown.    Pict.   Ig.  4 :  74.     C.  342. 

259. 
Blown-up.     Bishop  B.  4:102.     C. 

Blue?    Para.    1 :  55.     C.  23.    68, 

Pippa,  1 :  .•i56.     C.  140. 

Blue-black.     Som.2:12.     C.  167, 

258. 
Blue-flowering.    Karsh.  4 :  70,     C, 

;>40. 
Blue-eyed.     King  V,  1 :  388,      C. 

153. 


310 


Blue -fly 


INDEX 


Blue-fly.    Fr.Fu.  6:331.     C.  Om. 
Blunder.     R.&B.  3:117.     C.HHJ. 

i6i. 
Priuee  H.  4:3G0.     C.  693. 

140. 
Blunderer's-ineptitude.     R.  &  B. 

3 :  416.     C.  "il. 
Bluphocks.    Pippa,  1:350.    C.  138. 
Blur.     Red  Cott.  5:21.      C.  744. 


Lin  A.  5:  271.    C.  784. 
Fr.  Fu.  6: 
C.  616. 


C.441. 
76.  C. 
C.  630. 
103. 
C.  737. 
C. 


„70- 
Blush-rose. 

22. 
Blush-rose-bosomed. 

331.   c.  <.m.  ■ 

Bluster.    Balau.  4:298. 

275- 
Boanerges.    Pacch.o:  .321.    C.  803. 
Boar-sward.    Pan,  6:190.     C.  910. 
Board-head.    Straf .  1 :  192.    C.  74. 
Boast.     R.&B.  3:360.     C.  555. 

123. 
Boasting.     R.&B.  3:69. 

Boat-fountain.     R.  &  B.  3 

444. 
Boat-side.    Ari.  A.  5 :  104. 

212. 
Boatman-spider's.     Ari.  A. 

C.  630.     174. 
Bobbins.    Red  Cott.  5 :  4. 

127. 
Boccaccio's.     R.  &  B.  3:  155. 

476. 
Bodes.    Serenade,  2:74.     C.  190. 

286. 
BodUy.     Prol.  Dra.  I.  2d,  6:  153. 

C.  892.     115. 
Body.     Pan.  1 :  14.     C.  7.  49. 

Stat.  &  B.  2 :  327.     C.  285. 

232. 

R.&B. 3: 218.  C.501.  232. 

Fra  Lippo,  4:78.     C.   344. 

179. 

Andrea,  4:85.    C.  .346.    56. 

Fifine,  4:396.     C.  709.    51. 

Red   Cott.  5:61.      C.  759. 

233. 

Prol.  La  S.  6:  53.     C.  849. 

233. 

La  S.  6:  .57.     C.  851.     165. 

Epil.    Mihrab,    6:256.      C. 

936.     227. 
Ger.  de  L.  6:  S47.     C.  972. 

197- 
Rev.    6:435;     7:104.      C. 

1(X)5.     234. 
Body-gnard.     R.  &  B.  3:43.     C. 
431.    249, 


Born-baptized 
At  the  M.  5:3;i4. 


Body-ruined. 

C.  808. 

B(Ehme.    Trans.  4 :  57.     C.  .336. 
Boils.    Pippa,  1:327.    C.  129.    46. 
Boiling-point.   Red  Cott,  5 :  12.    C. 

741.     182. 
Bold.    J.  Lee,  4: 155.  C.374.   140. 
Bold-mouthed.    Agam.  6 :  43.     C. 

846. 
Bold-print.    How  it  S.  4:59.     C. 

33(j. 
Boldness.     Geo.  B.  D.  6:  324.     C. 

963.     228. 
Bolt-device.   Ger.  de  L.  6 :  345.    C. 

971. 
Bombardon's.      Chas.    A.   6 :  363. 

C.  978. 
Bond.  J.  Lee,  4:157.   C.374.   145. 

Mihrab,    6:254.       C.    935. 

178. 
Bone-piped.     Flute-M.  6:422;  7: 

7(i.     V.  1000. 
Bones-and-museles.      Sor.    1 :  277. 

C.  107. 
Bonfire.     Fr.  Fu.  6:  .331.     C.  965. 

20. 
Boniface.     Sor.  1 :  195.     C.  76. 

Sor.  1 :  265.     C.  103. 

Book.     Pau.  1:7.     C.  4. 

-R.&B.  3:  23.    C.  423.   204. 

R.   &   B.  3:477.      C.  601. 

287. 

Chris.-Eve,    4 :  4. 

112. 

One  Word,  4 :  124. 

249. 

Ger.  de  L.  6 :  ;>44. 

114. 
Book-made.    R.  &  B.  3:37. 

428. 
Book-shelf. 

171. 
Books.     Para.  1:44.     C.  19.     114. 

Doctor,  6 :  184.   C.  907.  221. 

Boor-and-bumpkin-haunted.      Lm 

A.  5:311.     C.  sax 
Boot-end.     Inn  A.  5 :  246.     C.  775. 

203. 
Booty-sharing.     Agam.  6:7.      C 

832. 
Borage.     Karsh.  4 :  70.     C.  .340. 
Bordure.    R.  &  B.  3 :  4.50.    C.  591. 
Born.     Para.  1 :  S9.     C.  3<).     103. 

Fifine,  4:  391.    C.  706.    219. 

Inm.    Aug.    (i :  426  ;    7 :  85. 

C.  1001.     157. 
Born-baptized -and-bred.    R.  &  B. 

3:419.     C.  579. 


C.  317. 
C.  361. 
C.  970. 
C. 
Evelyn,    2:23.      C. 


311 


Borne 


INDEX 


Brain 


Borne.     E.  &  B.  3:155.     C.  476. 

196. 
Bonie-off.     La  S.  6:  55.     C.  850. 
Boisi.     R.  &  B.  3:  227.     C.  505. 
Bosom-beats.     One  Word,  4:  124. 

C.  :m.  _ 

Bosom-friend.     Childe   R.  2 :  335. 

C.  2.S8.     18. 
Bosomf ul.    Lm  A.  5 :  270.     C.  784. 

15. 
Bossex.    La  S.  6:  73.     C.  858. 
Both.    Soul's  Tr.  2:355.     C.  296. 

Both-yet-neither.     An.  A.  5 :  177. 

c.  (m. 

BottinI,  Doctor.    R.  &  B,  3:  467. 

C.  597. 
Bottom.    Moses,  6 :  235.     C.  928. 

Chris.  Sm.  6:  317,     C.  961. 

127. 

Fr.Fu.  6:336.    C.  968.    66. 

Bottom-growth.     Chas.  A.  6:359. 

C.  977.     169. 
Bottom -rock.      R.   &   B.  3:405. 

C.  573. 
Bottom -scalp.     R.  &  B.  3:116. 

C.  460. 
Bough.    R.  &  B.  3:  206.     C.  496. 

136. 
Bought.      Love,    2:26.      C.    172. 

95- 
Boulder -stones.     By  Fire.    2:60. 

C.  185. 
Bound.     R.  &  B.  3:  366.     C.  558. 

33. 
Boundary-line.      R.  &   B.  3:391. 

C.  567.     85. 
Boundaries.      Luria,    2 :  378.      C 

305.     287. 
Boundiugly.      Bar.  de  M.  6:300. 

C.  954.     245. 
Boverio.     Ponte  A.  6:411;  7:55. 

C.  996. 
Bow.     Inn  A.  5 :  268.     C.  783.    56. 
Bow-and-arrow.  ■    Ari.  A.  5:  184. 

C.  661. 
Bow-hand.     A  Blot,  2:151.      C. 

219. 
Bow-hand- wise.     Red  Cott.  5 :  7. 

C.  739. 
Bowed.    R.  &  B.  3:  359.     C.  555. 

Bower-birds.     Geo.  B.  D.  6:  320. 

C.  <«il.     45. 
Bowl-full.    Red  Cott.  5:69.      C. 

7t32. 
Bowl-shape.     Apol.  &  F,  6:289. 

C.  950. 


Bowze.    Ari.  A.  5:138.     C.  644. 
Boy.      Druses,     2:99.       C.     164. 
230. 

Fra  Lippo,  4 :  7().      C.  343. 

239. 

Death  in  D.  4 :  192.     C.  3S6. 

Ivhn,  6:  135.     C.  883.     77. 

Boy-and-girl-fool's-play.     R.  &  B. 

3:427.     C.  5S2.     87. 
Boy  -  brood.      Ivkn,      (> :  i;34.      C. 

882. 
Boy  -  Cupid's.     Which  ?    (J :  400  ; 

7:28.     9.991. 
Boy-experiments.    Ari.  A.  5:121. 

C.  637. 
Boy-garland.    Ari.  A.  5:203.     C. 

668. 
Boy-inquirer.     Druses,  2 :  116.     C. 

205. 
Boy-man.    Joch.  6:  233.     C.  927. 
Boy -thing.     Apol.  &  F.    6:287, 

C.  949. 
Boy's-attempt.     Sor.  1:211.      C. 

82. 
Boy's  -  speech.     A    Blot,    2:177. 

C.  229. _ 
Boy's -triumph.     Ari.  A.  5:176. 

C.  659. 
Boys.     R.&B.  3:229.     C.  506, 

155- 

Trans.  4 :  57.     C.  335.     155. 

Boys'  -  play.     Inn  A.  5 :  302.     C. 

797.     291. 
Brabble.      R.   &    B.   3:106.      C. 

mi. 

Braccio,  Ser.  Luria,  2 :  362.  C.  299. 
Brag.     Ari.   A.   5:124.      C.   638. 

218. 
Braggart-sneak.     R.  &  B.  3:82, 

C.  446. 
Brain.     Para.  1:109.    C.  43.    121. 

Sor.  1 :  236.     C.  92.     2. 

Last  R.     2:280.      C.  268. 

lOI. 

Luria,  2 :  383.     C.  307.  202. 

Luria,  2:400.     C.  .314.  105. 

R.    &    B.   3:64.      C.   439. 

R.  &"  B.   3:280.      C.  526. 

284. 
R.  &   B.   3:285.      C.  527. 

255- 
One  Word,  4: 124,     C.  361. 

105- 
Mar.  Rel.  6:117.     C.  875. 

286. 
Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  320.     C.  962, 

151. 


312 


Brain-bag 


INDEX 


Brain-bag.    Joch.  f>:214.     C.  919. 
Brain -born.      Chris.   Sm.  G:313. 

C.  959. 
Brain-disorder.    Chris.  Sm.  6 :  315. 

C.  9G0. 
Brain-escape.     Fifine,  4 :  403.     C. 

713. 
Brain-lodged.     Clive,  0 :  I'jT.      C 

894. 
Braiu-mask.    Sor.  1 :  28S.     C.  112. 
Brain-pan.     Joch.  C:  217.     C.  921. 
Brain -skill.     Fifine,   4:387.      C. 

704. 
Brain-stock.     Fifine,   4 :  407.      C 

715. 
Brain-stuffed.     Balau.  4:270.     C. 

605. 
Brain-war.     K.  &  B.  3:454.      C. 

593. 
Brains.     Para.  1 :  63.     C.  26.    253. 
Braiuful.     R.   &   B.   3:147.      C. 

472.     51. 
Brainpan.     Two  Poets,  6:96.     C. 

Bramble-bush.    R.  &  B.    3:256. 

C.  516. 
Bramble-finch.     R.&B.  3:369. 

C.  558. 
Bran  -  new.      Inn  A.   5 :  245.      C. 

774. 
Brancepeth.     Boot,  2:  3.     C.  163. 
Branch-work.    By  Fire.  2:  59.    C 

185. 
Branchage-roof .    Red  Cott.  5 :  16. 

C.  742. 
Brand-new.    Red  Cott.  5 :  54.     C. 

75(). 
Branded.      R.   &    B,   3:84.      C. 

447. 
Branding -tool.     Holy-C.  2:320. 

C.  282. 
Brangled.     R.  &  B.  3:  6.     C.  416. 
Brass.     R.  &  B.  3:86.      C.  448. 
37- 

R.   &  B.  3:100.     C.  454. 

52. 
Brass-bold.      Ned  B.  6:145.      C. 

888. 
Bravado.    R.&B.  3:34.     C.  428. 

6. 
Brave.     Prospiee,  4 :  216.     C  395. 

287. 
Bravery.      R.   &   B.   3:. 390,      C. 

567.     20. 
Bravo-hiring.    R.&B.  3:  228.    C. 

505 
Brayed.     Pretty  W.  2 :  77.    C.  191. 

150. 


Breathe 
Ari.  A. 
C.  527. 


Brazen  -  shield  -  bearing. 

5 :  202.     C.  (J68. 
Breach.    R.&B.  3:284 

186. 
Bread -bounty,      R,   &   B,  3:79. 

C,  445. 
Bread-winner.    Doctor,  6 :  182.    C 

906. 
Break.    R.  &  B.  3:187.     C.  489. 
105. 

R.    &   B.  3:332.     C.  545. 

198. 

Dan.  Bar.  6:304.     C.  955. 

284. 

BadD.  1.6:394;  7:15.     C. 

989.     150. 
Break-down.     Para.  1 :  70.     C  29. 

King  C.  1 :  402.     C.  158. 

Break-up.     Two  Poets,  6 :  85.     C. 

8(i2. 
Breaks.     Druses,  2  :  117.     C.  205. 
182. 
La  tt.  6:71.     C.  857 


.53. 


Breakfast.    Flight,  2 :  297.    0.274. 

245- 
Breaking.     Sor.  1:  291.     C.  113. 
Breast.     King  V.  1:381.     C.  150. 

92. 
Breast-blade.     R.&B.  3: 82.     C. 
446.     240. 
R.&B.  3:  314.     C.  538.    9. 


Breast-deep.    Chas.  A.  6 :  354.    C. 

974. 
Breast-high.     Ari.  A.  5:  100.     C. 

629. 
Breasts'-birth.     Fifine,  4 :  388.     C. 

704. 
Breath.     Pau.  1 :  19.     C.  9.     5. 

Pippa,  1 :  330.    C.  l."0.   251 . 

R.&B. 3: 258.  C.517.  163. 

R.    &    B.    3:277.      C.  .524. 

259- 

Two  Poets,  6 :  112.     C.  873, 

252. 

Dan.  Bar.  6:304.     C.  955. 

202. 

Sum.  Bon.  6 :  393  ;  7 :  11.    C. 

988.     16. 
Breath-bubbles.     Para.  1 :  45.     C 

19. 
Breath-bursts.     Ger.  de  L.  6 :  350, 

C.!17.!.     181. 
Breath-distent.     Flute-M.  6:422; 

7 :  7(i.     C.  1(K)0. 
Breath-stopping.    Para.  1 :  83.    C 

33. 
Breathe.     R.  &  B .  3 :  430.     C.  583. 

222, 


313 


Breathe 


Breathe.      Wanting,   6:  196, 
911.     147. 

Geo.  B.  U.  6 :  321.     C.  962. 

168. 
Breathing-intervals.     Colombe,  2: 

lie!.  _  C.  2m. 
Breathing-space.    Bean-St.  C :  272. 

C.  !^>-l2. 
Breathing-stop.     K.  &B.  3:39fi. 

C.  .'i<i9. 
Breathing- while.    Sor.  1 :  265.     C 
lO.H. 

R.  &  B.  3:  336.   C.  54f5.   77. 

R.   &   B.  3:345.     C.  550. 

183. 
Briar-rose .    Flute-M.  6 :  423 ;  7 :  79. 

C.  1000. 
Brick-and-mortar.     Chris.  Sm.  6: 

312.     C.  959. 
Brick-built.     Ned  B.  6:145.     C. 

8.S.S. 
Brick-heap.     R.  &  B.  3:77.     C. 

444.     107. 
Brick-work.    R.  &  B.  3:73.     C. 

443. 
Bride-bed.    Balau.4:277.    C.  608. 
Brief.     Para.  1 :  57.     C.  24.     254. 

Sor.  1:  .314.     C.  123.     174. 

R.   &   B.   3:124.      C.  463. 

136. 
R.   &   B.  3:421.      C.  579. 


INDEX  Brother's-bearing 

C.    Brisklier.     R.   &  B.  3:353.     C. 
C.740. 
C. 


Bean-St. 
255- 


6:271.      C.    942. 


Bridge-building.     Red  Cott.  5 :  30. 

C.  747. 
Bridge-foot.     R.  &  B.  3:9.     C. 

417. 
Bridge-side.     Sor.  1 :  254.     C.  98. 
Bright.     Pau.  1 :  3.     C.  3.  25. 
Bright-and-big.     Epil.   Pacch.   5: 

:;92.     C.  829. 
Bright-edged.     Epil.  Fer.  6:283. 

C.  946. 
Bright-eyed.    R.  &B.3:377.     C. 

.5(i2. 
Bright-white.  Eas.-Day,  4 :  46.   C. 

332. 
Brightemng.    Sludge,  4 :  226.      C. 

399.     241. 
Brilliance.      Sor.   1:223.      C.   86. 

260. 
Brisk-and-bold.     R.  &  B.  3:126. 

C.  464. 
Brisk-marching.   Dan.  Bar.  6 :  310. 

C.  958. 
Brisk-trotting.     R.  &  B.  3:  7.     C. 

417. 


Brisklier. 

.553.     205. 
British.    Red  Cott.  5 :  10. 

87. 
Broad-edge.    How  it  S.  4 :  59. 

336. 
Broad-faced.    Serenade,  2 :  74.    C. 

189. 
Brocade-strips.     R.  &  B.  3:144. 

C.  471. 
Broider-franie.      R.    &    B.   3:74. 

C  443. 
Broidery-frame.    R.  &  B.  3  :  248. 

C.  513. 
Broiling.    Ned  B.  6 :  143.     C.  887. 

123. 
Broke.    In  Three  D.  2  :  81.    C.  192. 
236. 

Luria,2:.383.    C.307.    126. 

R.   &    B.  3:64.      C.  439. 


177.  . 
Broken.    Luria,  2:  371. 


C.  303. 
R.  &  B.  3:260.     C. 


^52. 
Broken-in. 

517.     162. 
Broken-up.    Sor.  1 :  255.     C.  99. 
Bronze.     My  Last  D.  2 :  234.     C. 

252.     34.  . 
Bronze-dippings.   Agam.  6  :  20.  C. 

837. 
Bronze-throats.     R.   &   B.   3:52. 

C.  434. 
Brood-bird.    R.  &  B.  3  :  433.     C. 

584. 
Brood-nests.     Agam.  6  :  5.    C.  832. 
Brood-song.    Sor.  1 :  210.     C.  81. 
Broods.    Red  Cott.  5 :  3.     C.  737. 

217. 
Broom.    Fra  Lippo,  4  :  75.    C.  342. 
Broth.     EpU.  Pacch.  5:394.     C. 

829.     171. 
Brother  Lawrence.      SolU.  2  :  12. 

C.  167. 
Brother.    Sor.  1 :  197.    C.  76.    286. 
Brother-brute.    R.    &   B.   3:375. 

C.  561. 
BrotheHn-the-devil.    R.  &  B.  3: 

4(;3.     C.  595. 
Brother-hke.    R.  &  B.  3:  421.    C. 

579. 
Brother-priest.    R.   &  B.   3:266. 

C.  520. 
Brother-sculptor.    Ari.  A.  5 :  165. 

C.  654. 
Brother-soul.     Red    Cott.    5:42. 

C.  752. 
Brother's-bearing.    Luria,   2 :  390. 

C.  310. 


314 


Brotherhood 


INDEX 


Brotherhood  of  Death.    R.   &   B. 

3:30.     C.  42(i. 
Brow.     The    CoTifess.    2:17.      C. 

169.     14. 
Stat.  »fe  B,  2 :  324.     C.  2S4. 

252. 

R.  &  B.  3:  27.     C.  425.  68. 

R.   &  B.    3:144.     C.  471. 

161. 
R.   &  B.  3:277.     C.  525. 

262. 
R.   &  B.  3:335.     C.    546. 

193. 

Andrea,  4:  85.  C.  347.  184. 

Inn  A.  5 :  276.    C.  7S6.  103. 

Brow-bald.    Ari.    A.    5:121.     C. 

637. 
Brow-contracting.    Balau.  4 :  307. 

C.    619. 
Brow-furrowed.    Reph.  6 :  431 ;  7 : 

95.     C.  1004.     4. 
Brows.     Para.  1:60.     C.  25.     189. 
Browbeat.     R.   &  B.   3:79.      C. 

445.     260. 
Brown,  Rawdon.    R,  Brown,     C. 

947. 
BrowTi-etched.    R.  &B.  3:2.     C. 

415. 
Brown-skinned.     Ari.   A.    5 :  144. 

C.  646. 
Brown-sleeve.  Sor.  1 :  283.    C.  110. 
Brown-winged.    Ari.    A.    5 :  192. 

C.  665. 
Browning,  Robert.     Light  W.  2: 
278.     C.  267. 

R.  Brown.  C.  947. 

Brushwood-shears.     A    Blot,    2 : 

144.     C.  217. 
Brute.     Para.  1 :  73.     C.  30.     278. 

Chris.-Eve,  4:27.     C.   325. 

153. 

Ben  Ezra,  4:186.     C.  384. 

II. 

Inn  A.  5:  288.     C.  791.    68. 

Brute-beast.     R.    &   B.   3:6.     C. 

416.     62. 
Brute-beast-face.     Fifine,     4:391. 

C.  706. 
Brute-beastship.    Ari.  A.  5:158. 

C.  651. 
Brute-blows.     Ari.  A.  5:119.     C. 

636. 
Brute-companionship.    Fifine,    4 : 

385.     C.  703. 
Brute-force.     Straf.  1:136.    C.52. 

Luria,  2 :  364.     C.  300.     25. 

R.   &  B.  3:286.     C.  528. 

117. 


Bugaboo-and 
Fifine,    4:415.      C. 


Brute-guise. 

720. 
Brute-language.     Inn    A.    5:282. 

C.  789. 
Brute-pageant.    Fifine,  4:431.     C. 

72S. 
Brute-presence.    Two  Poets,  '6 :  91. 

C.  8(>4.     102. 
Brute-type.     Bad  D.   111.6:397; 

7:21.     C.'.m. 
Brutes.      Karsh.   4  :  69.      C.   340. 
149. 

Bishop  B.  4:  111.     C.  357. 

7. 

Arcades,   6:  406;  7:  43.     C. 

993.     5. 
Brutify.     R.  «fe  B.  3:  79.     C.  445. 

98. 
Brvan.    Straf.  1 :  164.     C.  63. 
Bubble.     Up  — Down,  2:  33.     C. 
174.     265. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  98.    C.  453.  205. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  443.  C.  oSS.  248. 

R.   &  B.  3:472.     C.  bm. 

74. 
Bubble-fish.     Fifine,    4:414.      C. 

719. 
Bubble-kiug.     At  the   M.   5:332. 

C  .S()7. 
Bubble-like.     Red  Cott.  5:48.    C. 
7.54.    23. 

Joch.  6:231.     C.  926.     22. 

Bubble  -  scheme.      Inn  A.  5:288. 

C.  791. 
Bubble-sheU.    Druses,  2 :  119.     C. 

206. 
Bubblyjock's.    M.-m.  Meg,  6 :  405  ; 

7:41.     C.  993. 
Bud.    R.   &  B.  3:271.     C.  522. 
114. 

Reph.     6:432;    7:97.      C. 

1004.     211. 


Bud-mouth.    Prince  H.  4:  331.    C. 

682. 
Buds.    St.  Mart.  5 :  352.     C.  814. 
280. 

Ger.  de  L.  6:  346.     C.  971. 

16. 
Budge.    R.&.B.  3:170.     C.  482. 

131. 
Budget.    R.  &B.  3:51.     C.  434. 
Buff -coats.      Flight,    2:295.      C. 

273. 
Buffle.     Flight.  2 :  292.     C.  272. 
Buffoonery.    Chris.-Eve,  4:  30.    C. 

326.     191. 
Bugaboo-and-baby-work.    R.  &  B. 

3:164.     C.  479. 
315 


Bugle-bright 


IXDEX 


Byron's 


BtiRle-biig-ht-blackness.      Geo.    B. 

D.  GloL'U.      C.  !Hi2. 
Buh^yseh.    Mu%.  ():165.    C.  898. 
Builds.     Fifine,    4:433.     C.    730. 

263. 
Building-pelt.    Sor.  1 :  285.  C.  111. 
Building-spanow.    R.  &B.3:2(>4. 

C.  r>y.\. 

Building-time.     Sor.    1 : 2.57.      C. 

KKJ. 
BuU-like.    R.    &    B.  3:141.     C. 

470. 
Bull-hides.    Para.  1 :  96.     C.  .38. 
Bull^imilitude.     R.  &   B.  3:141. 

C.  471). 
Bullfineh-bubblings.     Hute-M.  6: 

420  ;  7 :  73.     C.  im. 
Bully-beggar.    R.  &  B.  3 :  82.    C. 

446. 
Bulrush-spear.   Numph.  5 :  350.  C. 

814.     264. 
Bunyan's.     Ned    B.    6:148.      C. 

8'.»n. 
Buols.     App.  Fail.  4:  257.    C.  412. 
Buonarroti.    R.  &  B.  3  :  476,     C. 

mi. 

Buonarroti's.      Bea.   Sig.   6 :  412  ; 

7  :  57.     C.  99(3. 
Burden.      Epil.    Mihrab,    6:256. 

C.  9o(J.     81. 
Burgess-family.    R.  &  B.  3  :  116. 

C.  460. 
Burgess-fellowship.     Red  Cott.  5  : 

22.     C.  744. 
Burgess-iife.  '  R.  &  B.  3 :  107.     C. 

456. 
Bui^ess-spirit.     R.   &   B.   3 :  405. 

C  573. 
Burgess-wife.    R.  &B.3:109.    C. 

457. 
Bum.    Stat.  «fe  B.  2 :  328.     C.  286. 
22g. 

Fifine.  4:405.    C  714.    233. 

Forgiv.  5  :  .304.  C.  819.  221. 

Burned.     Toccata,  2  :  36,     C,  175. 

Burning.      Prol.   A.   6:390;   7:2. 

C.  987.     25. 
Burning-bright.     Chas.  A.  6 :  355. 

C.  975. 
Burnt.   Luria.  2  :  .383.  C.307.  202. 
Bumt-up.    Flight,  2  :  289.    C.  271. 

187. 
Burr-heads.    Sor.  1 :  293.     C.  114. 
Burr-like.     R.&B.  3:58.    C.  437. 
Burst.   R.&B.  3:  4.3.    C.  4-31.   25. 

Joeh.  6 :  226.     C.  924.     224. 

Bury.    Sor.  1 :  204.     C.  79.     19. 


Bush-bearded.  R.&B. 3: 122.   C. 

402.     113. 
Bushy-bearded.      R.  &  B.  3:18. 

C.  421.     142. 
Business.     Italian,  2 :  256.    C.  2(;0. 

280. 
R.  &  B.  3:38.3.      C.  5<>4. 

31. 
In    a   B.   4:13<;.      C.   366, 

61. 
Prince  H,  4  :  347,     C.  688. 

Business-terms,    Red  Cott,  5 :  G4. 

C,  760. 
Busy.  R.&B,3:12,  C.  419.   112, 
Butcher's-meat,    R,  &  B.  3 :  411. 

C.  575. 
Butter-casks,    Pied  Piper,  2:  285. 

C.  269, 
Butterfly.    R.  &   B.   3:141.     C. 
470.     107. 
La  S.  6:58.     C.  8.51.    81. 


Butterfly-like,     Two  Poets,  6 :  89, 

C.  863, 
Butterflies.     Toccata,  2:36,      C, 

175,     234. 
Buttress-chinks,    Sor.  1 :  203,     C 

78. 
Buy.  Andrea,  4:87.    C.  .347.   228. 
Buzzing.    Confess.  4 :  214.    C.  394. 

59. 
By-blow.    R.&B.  3: 119.    C.  461, 
By-circumstance,    R.  &  B,  3:  119. 

C.  461.     190. 
By-comers.   Pippa,  1 :  .357.    C.  141, 
By-nicety.    Agam.  6  :  45.     C  846, 
By-part,    R.  &  B.  3 :  4(J8.     C.  574. 
By-place.    R.&B. 3:  307.    C.536. 

41. 
By-road,    R.  &  B,  3 :  80,     C.  445, 

5- 
By-stroke.     R.  &  B.  3:285.     C. 

.527.     266. 
By-word.    R.&B.  3:  267.    C.  520. 
By-work.      Cenciaja,   5 :  372.      C 

822.     244. 
Bystanders.     Para.  1:68.     C.  28, 

Tray,  6 :  142,    C.  887.    209, 


Bye-canaLs.     Ponte  A.  6:407;  7: 

4(i.     C.  994. 
Bve-circumstanee.    R.  &  B.  3 :  119. 

'C.  461. 
Bye-word.   Bea.  Sig,  6  :  415 ;  7 :  &3. 

C,  997. 
Bvron,  Lord.    Inn  A,  5 :  281,     C, 

788. 
BjTon's.    La  S.  6:73.     C.  858, 


316 


Cabal 


INDEX 


Careful 


Cabal.    Straf .  1 :  164.     C.  G3. 
Cabbage-bed.    R.&B.  3:27.     C. 

425. 
Cabin.     Bishop  B.  4:94.     C.  350. 

175. 
Cage-mates.    Red  Cott.  5 :  83.     C. 

708. 
Calash.    R.  &  B.  3 :  165.     C.  480. 
Calculate.     R.&B.  3: 73.     C.443. 

44- 
Caliban.     Caliban,  4 :  210.  C.  393. 
Call.    R.&B.  3:  397.    C,  570.    96. 

Chris.-Eve,  4 :  26.      C.  325. 

32. 

Death  in  D.  4 :  192.  C.  386. 

226. 
Call-bird.     R.   &  B.  3:452.     C. 

592. 
Calm.    R.&B.  3:  34.  C.427.  205. 

Numph.    5:350.       C.    814. 

181. 

Sonnet,   C  11.     250. 

Calm-hearted.    Sor.  1 :  233.    C.  90. 
Calotypist's.    Mesmer.  2 :  244.     C. 

255. 
Calvano.      Englishm.   2:262.      C. 

261.     245. 
Calvary.    Holy-C.  2 :  319.     C.  282. 

210. 
Calvin.     La  S.  6:57,     C.  851. 
Calvins.     R.  &  B.  3 :  401.     C.  572. 
Camel-collar.    Sor.  1  :  294.    C.  114. 
Camel-rest.     Ari.   A,    5 :  174.     C 

()58. 
Camel-staff.     Druses,  2 :  105.     C. 

200. 
Camp-iise.    Fr.Fu.  6:341.    C.  970. 
Campaigns.    R.  &  B.  3:324.     C. 

54().      122. 
Campanile.     Old  Pict.  2 :  40.      C. 

177.     90. 
Can.    Andrea,  4:86.    C  347.     27. 

AbtV.4:184.    C.  383.     93. 

Candle-blink.     R.&B.  3:41.     C. 


430. 
Candle-contest. 

C.  578. 
Candle-crotchet. 

C.  79(). 
Candle-end.     R.  &  B.  3  :  468. 

597. 
Candle-flame.    R.  &  B.  3 :  44. 

431. 
Candle-smoke.      Pict.    Ig.    4 :  74. 

C.  342. 


R.  &  B.  3:417. 
Inn  A.  5:302. 
C. 
C. 


Candlestick-maker.    R.  &   B.  3: 

119.     t'.  4(il. 
Cane.     How  it  S.  4  :  .58.     C.  336. 
Canidia.     White  W.  6  :  394  ;  7 :  14. 

C.  its'.}. 
Canidian.    R.  &  B.  3  :  61.    C.  438. 

103. 
Cannikin.     Flight,  2 :  307.     C.  278. 
Canon.     Flight.  2  ;  2!W).     C.  274, 
Cant-clothed.     Pacch.  5:322.     C. 

804.     67. 
Caper-cuts.    Ari.   A.   5:239.      C. 

680, 
Capo-in-vSacco.     R.    &   B.   3:194. 

C.  491. 
Captive,    R.&B.  3: 183.     C.  487, 
150. 

Red    Cott.    5:34.     C.   749. 

15- 
Car-enthronement.    Agam.   6 :  31. 

C.  842. 
Card.     R.   &    B.  3:286.     C.  528. 

223. 
Card-table-quitters.    R.  &  B.  3: 

22.     C.  423. 
Cards.     R.   &   B.  3:93.     C.   451. 
8r. 

R.   &   B.  3:152.     C.  475. 

229. 

R.  &   B.  3:442.     C.  588. 

258. 
Care.    Straf.  1:154.     C.  59.     267, 

King  V.   1:380.      C.    149, 

62. 

Ben  Ezra,  4  :  186.     C.  384, 

120. 

Two  Poets,  6 :  81.     C.  860, 

241. 
Care-bit.    Sor.  1 :  255.     C.  99. 
Care-bitten.     R.  &  B.  3:  122.     C. 

462.     113. 
Care-burden.      Agam.    6:8.      C 

833. 
Care-burdened.      King  C.   1 :  393. 

C.  155. 
Care-free.     Bean-F.  6:403;  7:36. 

C.  992.     190. 
Cares.   Luria,  2  :  381.   C.  307.    179, 

In    a    B.   4:137.      C.   3()6. 

232. 
Cared.    R.  &  B.  3:69.      C.  441. 

179. 
Cared-for.    Gram.  Fun.  2  :  310.    C. 

2711. 
Careful.    R.  &  B.  3:  31.     C.  427. 
202. 

R.  &  B.  3:233.     C.  507. 

140. 


317 


Careless  INDEX 

R.  &B.  3:31.     C.  427. 
Inn  A.  5:271. 
C.  17. 


Careless 

193. 
Careless-earnest 

C.  785. 
Carelessness.     Para.  1 :  41 

40.     142. 
Cargo.     K.  &  B.  3  :  197.     C.  492. 
Caritellas.      R.   &   B.   3:21.     C. 

422. 
Carlines.    R.  &B,  3:8.     C.  417. 
Carlisle.     Straf.  1 :  172.     C.  66. 
Carlyle.     Inn  A.  5  :  2.54.     C.  778. 
Carmel.    R.  &  B.  3:48.     C.  433. 

200. 
Carnage-licker.     Agam.  6 :  46.    C. 

S47. 
Carnival.     Fifine,  4  :  424.     C.  725. 
Camival-conntry.     Fifine,  4 :  426. 

C.  726.     269. 
Carnival-time.      R.  &   B.   3:285. 

C.  527. 
Carpet-spreadings.     Agam.  G:2i. 

C.  84<X 
Carpet-stripes.    DisAl.  4:176.    C. 

.>S(J. 
Carpet-web.    Bean-St.  6 :  279.    C. 

t>45. 
Carriage.     R.&B.3:335.    C.546. 

Carrion-crow.    R.  &  B.  3 :  122.    C. 

4*J3. 
Carrion-handfnl.     Aii.  A.  o :  137. 

C.  643. 
Carrion-prey.    R.  &  B.  3 :  367.    C. 

558.        130.  rr,  T, 

Carte  -  and  -  tierce.      Two    Poets, 

6 :  107.     C.  871. 
Carting.   Paceh.  0  :  323.   C.804.    I. 
Cartulary.     R.  &  B.  3:229.      C. 

of)  5       202 
Caryatides. '  Sor.  1 :  202.     C.  78. 
"Casa  Gnidi."     Old  Pict.  2 :  44. 

C.  178. 
Case.     R.  &  B.  3:281.     C.  526. 

262. 
Case-harden.     Bishop  B.  4:106. 

C.  355. 
Case-hardened.     Para.  1 :  44.     C. 

19.     114- 
Casement-bars.    Para.  1:101.     C. 

40. 
Casket -lid.      Bea.  Sig.     6:417; 

7 :  68.     C.  998. 
Casket  -  shrine. 

C.  256. 
Ca.ssia.    Para.  1 :  90.     C.  36. 
Cassiodorus.    R.«feB.  3:290. 

529. 


Caution 
R.  &   B.   3:l(>i. 


Cassock -rags. 

C.  4S0. 
Cast.    J.  Lee,  4  :  162.     C.  376. 
Cast-iron-kemelled.     Ivkn,  6  :  137. 

C.  S.S4. 
Castellani's.    R.  &  B.    3:1.     C. 

414. 
Castle.     Pict.  Ig.  4  :  73.     C.  341. 

37. 
Castle-conrt.    Sor.  1 :  278.     C.  108. 
Castle  -  covert.     Sor.  1 :  246.      C. 

95. 
Castle-moat.    Sor.  1:233.     (7.90. 
Castle  -  stairs.      Count   G.   2:2aj. 

C.  252. 
Castle-warder.     Nat.  in  D.  2:7. 

C.  W>. 
Cat.     R.  &  B.    3:199.     C.  493. 

236. 
Cat-claw.    R.&B.3:44.     C.4.31. 
Cat-clawed.    R.  &  B.  3:13.     C. 

419. 
Cat-craft.    Inn  A.  5:282.     C.  789. 
Cat-like.    Flight,  2  :  29fi.     C.  274. 
Cats'-cradle.    R.  &B.  3:38.     C. 

429.     13. 
Catafalk.    Stat.  &  B.  2 :  .323.     C. 

284. 
Catch.    R.  &  B.  3:231.     C.  507. 

132. 
Cater-cousin.    R.  &B.  3:44.     C. 

431. 
Cater-cousins.    At  the  M.  5 :  334. 

C.  808. 
Caterpillar-like.    Red  Cott.  5 :  92. 

Cattle.'   "R.  &  B.  3:30.     C.  426. 

E.^&'B.  3:377.      C.  5(32. 

50. 
Cattle-tract.     Flight,  2:289.     C. 


271. 


Caudatory.    R-  &  B.  3:420.     C. 

579. 
Caught.     Soul's    Tr.  2:338.     C. 

289.     151. 
Cause.    R.  &  B.  3:133.     C.  467. 
277. 

Fr.    Fu.    6:338.      C.  9(>S. 

279. 
Caused.    R.&B.  3:248.     C.  51.3. 

30. 
,Caasev.    Sor.  1 :  284.     C.  111. 
Mesmer.  2  :  246.  |  Cautelous.     Sor.  1 :  263      C  lOQ. 
Caution.     Druses,  2  :  122.     C.  ^07. 

R.^'&    B.  3:27.      C.  425. 

202. 


c. 


318 


Caution 


Caution.    E.  &  B.  3 :  307.    C.  530. 

Cavalcading.     K.  &  B.  3 : !).     C. 

418. 
Cave -top.     Caliban,   4:207.      C. 

392. 
Caves.     Para.  1:36.     C.  Ki.    2i6. 
Cavem-mouth.     R.  &  B.  3 :  4()iJ. 

C.  r)!)S. 
Cavilment.     Bean-St.  6 :  271.      C. 

942. 
Cedar  -  blossom.      Druses,   2 :  142. 

C.  215. 
Cedar-fruit.     Druses,  2  :  lO.S.      C. 

202. 
Cedar -bouse.     Popul.   2:91.     C. 

195. 
Ceiling-hole.    R.&B.3:114.     C. 

459. 
Ceiling -rose.      Prince  H.   4:358. 

C.  692. 
Ceiling-top.    Pt.  &  B.  3:284.     C. 

527. 
Celestial.     Cbris.-Eve,  4:19.     C. 

323.    69. 
Celestiality.     Ari.  A.  5 :  136.     C. 

t)42. 
Celibate.    R.  &  B.  3 :  23.     C.  424. 

195- 
CeUarage.     Red  Cott.  5:22.     C. 

744. 
Cenci's,  Francesco.     Cenciaja,  5 : 

368.     C.  821.     191. 
Cenci-ease.     Cenciaja,    5 :  372.    C 

822. 
Censure.    R.&B.3:346.     C.  550. 

133. 
Centre.     Para.  1 :  43.     C.  18.  260. 
Centre-drop.     Fifine,   4 :  429.      C. 

727. 
Centre-fire.     Para.  1 :  116.     C.  46. 
Centre -spike.     Popul.  2:91.      C. 

195. 
Centuply-angled.     Numph.  5  :  349. 

C.  813. 
Century.      R.   &    B.   3:469.      C. 

598.     44. 
Centuries.     Love,  2:27.      C.  172. 

82. 
Cerinthus.      Death    in  D.   4:206. 

C.  391. 
Certainty.    R.&B.3:74.    C.  443. 

206. 
Chain.    Pau.  1 :  15.     C.l.    231. 
Forgiv.     5:363.      C.    818. 

91- 
Chair.    R.  &  B.  3 :  128.     C.  465. 


INDEX  Change 

Inn   A.   5:287.      C.  791. 


213. 


Chair. 

141. 
Chaired.      Ari.    A.    5:126.      C. 

639. 
Chalk.     Pietro,  6:179.      C.  905. 

30. 
Chalk-baU.    R.  &  B.  3 :  435.     C. 

5S5. 
Chalked-ring.     Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  323. 

C.  963. 
Chamber.      Gondola,  2:267.      C. 

263.     201. 
Chamber-entry.     In  a  B.  4:135. 

C.  366. 
Chamber-portals.  Oh  Love  !  6  :  386. 

C.  874. 
Chamber-robes.     Red   Cott.  5 :  44. 

C  753. 
Chamber-window's.     La  S.   6 :  57. 

C.  851. 
Champaign.     Red  Cott.  5:1.     C 

736.     210. 
Champed.      Ned  B.    6:147,      C. 

890.     257. 
Champion.     R.  &  B.  3  :  7.     C.  417. 

33.    .  .        ^ 

Champion-armor.  Prince  H.  4  :  367. 

C.  696. 
Championship.      Ari.    A.    5:111. 

C.  633.     4. 
Chance.     Sor.  1 :  292.    C.  114.    55- 

Any  Wife,  2:69.     C.  188. 

29. 

St.  Mart.   5:352.     C.   814. 

99. 
Chance-blades.      Waring,    2 :  270. 

C.  264. 
Chance -blow.      Sor.   1:311.      C. 

121. 
Chance-brightened.     Apol.   &  F. 

<):2.S7.     C.  949. 
Chance-gift.     Apol.  &  F.  6:291. 

C.  950. 
Chance-meetings.     In  a  B.  4  :  135. 

C.  365. 
Chance  -  rooted.       Inap.    (! :  400  ; 

7:26.     C.  991. 
Chance-sown.      Para.   1 :  117.      C 
4(i. 

R.  &  B.  3  :  379.     C.  563. 

Change.      Para.       1 :  76.      C   31. 
231. 

Para.  1:77.     C.  31.     21. 

Para.  1:101.     C.  40.     172. 

Kinff    C.    1:400.      C.    158. 

289. 

Old    Pict.   2:40.      C.  177. 

184. 


319 


Change 


Change.     Soul's  Tr.  2 :  351 
2iir>.     196. 

Luiia,  2  :  374.     C.  304.     25, 

R.   &  B.  3:143.      C.  471. 

256. 
Andrea,      4:88.      C.    348. 

183. 
In  a  B.       4  :  144.     C.  300. 

227 

In  a  B.  4  :  147.    C.  370.    41 . 

J.  Lee,  4: 1.55.     C.  37.3.    35. 

.Sludge,     4:223.       C.     3!)8. 

30. 
Prince  H.  4  :  338.     C.  685. 

23. 
Fifine,     4 :  4.30.       C.     728. 

172. 

Fifine,  4:  439.    C.  733.   263. 

Red  Cott.   5:32.     C.  748. 

233. 
Ari.    A.   5:107.      C.    G31. 

Pacch.  5 :  328.     C.  806. 

St.  Mart.  5:352.     C.  814. 

99- 

Fust,  6 :  .378.     C.  984.     71 . 

Dev.  6 :  430 ;  7 :  92.    C.  1003. 

16. 
Changes.     Ben  Ezra,  4  :  190.     C. 

385.     246. 
Changeable.    R.  &  B.  3 :  31.     C. 

426.     2. 

Fifine,  4  :  418.     C.  721.     74. 

Changed.     Pau.  1 :  9.     C.  5.     206. 

Para.  1 :  52.     C.  22.     207. 

Luria,  2  :  392.     C.  311.     79. 

Luria,     2:395.       C.     312. 

283. 
R.  &   B.  3:267.      C.  520. 

158. 
Death  in  D.  4 :  200.     C.  389. 

181. 
Red  Cott.  5:43.      C.  im. 

10. 

Inn  A.   5:287.   C.  790.  238. 

Chapel-rail.     R.  &  B.  3:35.     C. 

42.S.     34. 
Chapel  -  spire.      Red   Cott.   5 :  15. 

C.  742. 
Chapel-top.     Andrea,   4 :  83.      C. 

Chappell,Arthur.  Founder,  6 :  .387. 

C.  947. 
Charactered.    Para.  1 :  73.     C.  30. 

278. 
Charactery.     R.  &  B.  3:86.     C. 

448.     71. 
Chares.    Ari.  A.  5 :  237.     C.  680. 


INDEX 
C 


Chevr 


Charge.    Para.  1 :  .35.    C.  15.    226. 
R.«tB.3:62.    C.  4.38.    276. 


Chariot-board.    Ari.  A.  5:207.    C. 

670. 
Chariot-breed.    Ari.  A.  5  :  190.    C. 

iWA. 
Charity.    R.  &  B.  3 :  58,     C.  437. 

247. 
Charles.    Straf .  1 : 1 .31 .    C.  50.    63. 

King  V.  1 :  370.     C.  14(i. 

May  &  D.  4  :  215.     C.  395. 

NedB.():147.    C.  890.    18. 


Charles,  Duke.     R.  &  B.  3 :  443. 

C.  .588. 
Charm.     Pau.  1:21.     C.  9.     223. 

R.  &  B.  3  :  348.  C.  .5.51.  217. 

Rev.   0  :  437  ;     7  :  108.      C. 

1006.     266. 
Chamel.    Straf.  1 :  191.  C.  74.    64, 
Charon's-company.  Ari.  A.  5  :  147. 

C.  647. 
Chase.    Life  in  L.  2 :  81.     C.  192. 
13. 

Red  Cott.  5  :  .33.  C.  748.  30. 

Chastise.      R.   &   B.   3:124.      C. 

4(i3.     113. 
Chastity.      R.   &  B.  3:324.     C. 

542.     278. 
Chattel,    R.  &  B.  3 :  152.     C.  475. 

273. 
Chaunoprockt.  Ari.  A.  5  :  155.    C. 

(i.50. 
Cheat.    R.  &  B.  3 :  202.     C.  495. 

158. 
Cheatery.    Sludge,  4  :  2.32.    C.  402. 
Cheer.     Epil.   A.   6:440;    7:114. 

C.  1007.     267. 
Cheers.     Forgiv.  5 :  .359.     C.   817. 

230. 
Cheery-hopeless.     Inn  A.   5 :  275. 

C.  78(;. 

Cheese-ball,    Englishm.  2  :  2.59,  C. 

2(50. 
Cheese-cake.    Ari.  A.  5 :  142.     C. 

645. 
Cheesecake-time.     Ari.  A.  5  :  170. 

C.  (m. 

Cherishes.      Old   Pict.   2:40.      C. 

177.     10. 
Cherry  -  cheeked.       Two     Poet.g, 

6:108.     C.  871. 
Cherry-cheeks.    Two  Poets,  6 :  105. 

C.  870. 
Cherubim-chariot.   Saul,  2 :  50.   C, 

181. 
Chestnut-gold.      Mesmer.    2  :  243. 

C.  255. 
Chew.  R.  &B.3:8.    C.  417.    285. 


320 


Chiappino 


INDEX 


Chronicle 


Chiappino.     Soul's  Tr.  2 :  337.     C. 

289. 
Chiara.     Pippa,  1 :  355.     C.  140. 
Chief-inquisitor.     How  it  S.  4  :  59. 

C.  ooG.     237. 
Child.     Para.  1 :  98.     C.  39.     206. 

Gondola,  2  :  267.  C.  263.  56. 

R.&B.3:i:38.  C.469.  221. 

R.&B.3:317.  C.539.  53. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  453.    C.  592.    88. 

Joh.  Agri.  4  :  71.  C.  ;M1.  93. 

Child-cheat.    R.  &B.  3:34.     C. 

427. 
Child-destroyers.     Ari.  A.  5 :  223. 

C.  674. 
ChUd-lover.    Agam.6:23.    C.  838. 
Child-murder.    Ari.  A.  5  :  203.    C. 

668. 
Child  -  murder  -  plague.      Ari.   A. 

5  :  215.     C.  672. 
Child's.    R.  &  B.  3:13,     C7.  419. 

Children-chase.  Ari.  A.  5 :  205.    C. 

6()9. 
Children-loving.      Ari.  A.  5 :  198. 

C.  666. 
Children's-blood.     Ari.  A.  5  :  217. 

C.  672. 
Children's  -  feast.       Epil.    Paceh. 

5  :  .393.     C.  829. 
Childhood.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  359.     C. 

29S.     116. 
Childhood-long.    R.  &  B.  3 :  395. 

C.  569. 
Childish.     Prince  H.  4:372.     C. 

698.     89. 
Chime.    Holy-C.  2  :  316.     C.  281. 

2ig. 
Chin-bearded.    Ari.  A.  5  :  121.     C. 

637. 
Chinese.    R.  &  B.  3 :  85.     C.  447. 
Chink-chink.     Paceh.  5 :  330.     C. 

806. 
Chip.    Fifine,4:438.     C.  733.    10. 
Cliirre.    Sor.  1 :  324.     C.  127. 
Chiusi.    R.  &  B.  3 :  1.     C.  414. 
Choes-feast.     Ari.  A.  5 :  146.     C. 

647. 
Choice.    Eas.-Day,  4 :  47.     C.  332. 
60. 

Eas.-Day,  4:54.      C.   334. 

M5- 
Choke.    Ned  B.  6:147.     C.  890. 

224. 
Chokes.     R.  &  B.  3 :  58.     C.  437. 

247. 
Chokefull.    Red  Cott.  5:43.     C. 

752. 


Chokefull.      Ger.    de    L.    6:345. 

C.  971.     29. 
Choking.     By  Fire.  2 :  64.     C.  186. 

104. 
Choose.    Para.  1:66.     C.  27.    lOi. 

Soul's  Tr.     2  :  347.     C.  293. 

207. 

R.   ct   B.   3:398.      C.  570. 

150. 

Eas.  -  Day,  4  :  47.      C.  332. 

197. 

Sol.  &  B.  6:201.     C.  914. 

227^ 
Choosers.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  339.     C.  969. 

288. 
Choosing.     Red  Cott.   5:34.      C. 
749.     106. 

Inn  A.  5:  291.     C.  792.     76. 

ChopfaUen.    R.  «fe  B.  3 :  192.     C. 

490.  _ 
Chopping-bloek.      Sludge,   4 :  240. 

C.  405.    55. 
Choppy.     R.  &  B.  3 :  387.     C.  566. 

2. 
Choros-creatures.    Ari.  A.  5  :  176. 

C.  658. 
Choros-cap.     Ari.   A.   5:126.     C, 

639. 
Choros-treats.    Ari.  A.  5 :  142.    C. 

645. 
Chorus-ending.    Bishop  B.  4 :  96. 

C.  351. 
Choused.     Ari.  A.  5  :  159.     C.  652. 
Chowse.    Two  Poets,  6:111.     C. 

872, 
Christ.    R.&B.  3:208.     C.  497. 
252. 

R.&B.  3:  358.    C.554.    80. 

Eas.-Day,   4:56.      C.    335. 

160. 

Death  in  D.  4 :  197.     C.  388. 

Death  in  D.  4 :  198.     C.  388. 

84. 
Christening  -  font.       Gold     Hair, 

4  :  KiS.     C.  378. 
Christian.     R.   &  B.   3:396.     C. 

569.     42. 
Christian-atheists.  R.  &  B.  3 :  419. 

C.  579. 
Christmas.     R.  &   B.  3:1.36.     C. 

468.     210. 
Christmas-come-never-mas.       Inn 

A.  5:310.     C.  800. 
Christmas-time.     li.  &  B.  3:287. 

C.  528.     33. 
Christus.     Cleon,  4  :  122.     C.  361. 
Chronicle.     R.    &   B.   3:194.     C. 

491. 


321 


Chrusomelolonthion  INDEX 


Clarion-clear 


Chnisonielolonthion-Pbaps 

A.  5:114.     C.  ti34. 
Chrysopras.     Prol.  A.  6  :  389  ;  7  : 1. 

G.  9S7. 
Church.   Straf.  1:191.  C.  74^    129. 

R.    &   B.   3:148.     C.   473. 

199. 
R.    &   B.   3:294.     C.   531. 

;381.     C.   5fi3. 


55-    „ 
R.   &  B. 

269. 

Inn  A.  5:  281.    C.  788.    209. 

Ponte  A.  () :  407  ;  7  :  47.     C. 

994.     290. 
Church.     Red  Cott.  5:9.     C.  740. 

cSh-cloor.    R.&B.3:132.    C. 

4(i7. 
Church-flowers.     Colombe,  2  :  195. 

C  236. 
Church-plate.      Master   H.   2:93. 

C.  19t). 
Church-road.    Holy-C.  2  :  31(5.    C. 

281.     219. 
Church-spire.    Two  Poets,    6:80. 

C.  860.  ^     ^, 

Church's.      Sor.    1:199.      C.    77. 

R.  &  B.  3  :  400.    C.  571.  84. 

Churchyard.     Too    Late,    4:178. 

Churchyard-chat.      Clive,    6:157. 

Churn.    Ari.  A.   5 :  137.     C.  643. 

81.  ^ 

Cicada.    Two    Poets,  6:114.     C. 

873.     41. 
Cicero-ize.    R.   &    B.   3 :  318.     C. 

540.     61. 
Cigar-case-shape.     Inn  A.  5:247. 

Cimabi^e.     Old    Pict.    2:41.     C. 

Cinder-black.    Red  Cott.  5:  2.    C. 

7,H7.     269. 
Cipher-work.    Inn  A.  5  :  243.     C. 

Circle.     R.  &  B.  3  :  392.     C.  5(58. 

93 
Circuit-waU.    Red  Cott.  5  :  49.    C. 

754. 
Cireuraamhient.    Red  Cott.  5:5. 
C.  738. 

Ixion,  (i :  210.     C.  918.  I95- 

Circumstance.     Ben  Ezra,  4  :  190. 

C.  385.     194. 
Circumvallated.     R.  &  B.  3  :  123. 

C.  463.     178 


Ari.  1  Cirque.     R.  &  B.  3  :  .365.     C.    557. 
I  Citizfin.     R.  &  B.  3  :  155.     C.  476. 

Citizen's.    R.  &B.3:43.     C.431. 

76.  .      ^ 

Citrine-crystals.    Sor.   1 :  316.     G. 

123. 
City.     Luria,  2:384.     C.  308.    35. 
— —  R.   &    B.  3:60.      C.  438. 
118. 


City-and-gods'.     Agam.  6:25.  G. 

840.  ^ 

City-arms.    R.  &   B.   3:350.  G. 

552. 

City-dweller.    Chas.  A.  6  :  354.  C. 

City-face.    Ari.  A.  5  :  99.     C.  628 
City-fare.      R.   &   B.   3:154.     C. 

475. 
City-guarders.    Agam.  6  :  13.     C. 

City-ladies'.    R.  &  B.  3  :  261.     C. 

518.     89. 
City-sacker.    Agam.  6  :  16.    C.  8.36. 
City-square.     Up  —  Down,   2  :  32. 

C.  174.     112. 
City-swaying.     Agam.    6:6.      G. 

8:e.  ^ 

City-visitant.    Fifine,   4:386.     C. 

703.     18. 
City-watch.    R.  &  B.  3  :  439.     C. 

586.    222. 
City's.     Flight,  2:304.     C.  277. 

104. 
City's-Hell.    Agam.  6:22.    C.  838. 
Civility.    R.  &B.  3:66.     C.  440. 
Civilization.    R.  &  B.  3  :  400.     C. 

Clack-dish.    R.  &  B.  3:332.     C. 

545. 
Claim.    Sor.  1  :  221.     C.  85.     14.^ 
Ber.  de  M.  6  :  298.     C.  9u3. 


Claiming.  '  R.  &  B.  3  :  39.     C.  430. 

196. 
Clairvaux-top.     Red  Cott.   5  :  0(). 

C.  761. 
Clap.    Fifine,  4:  4.33.     C.  729.  265. 
Clap-to.     Her.  Tr.  2  :  314.     C.  281. 
Clara.     Rosny,    6  :  390  ;  7  :  4.      C. 

987. 
Clara  de  Millefleurs.    Red  Cott. 

5:38.     C.  751. 
Claret.    Pied    Piper,    2:285.     C. 

^9      53. 
Claret-flask.    Nat.  in  D.  2  :  7.     C. 

Clarion-clear.     Chas.    A.    6:363. 
C.  978. 


322 


Clarion-voice 


INDEX 


Close-clipt 


Two  Poets,  6  :  101. 

C.  423. 

C.  78(5. 
C.   429. 

c. 
c. 
c. 


Clarion-voice. 

C.  .S(i8. 
Clarity.     R.  &  B.  3:21. 

log. 
Clasps-to.     Inn  A.  5  :  276. 
Class.     R.    &  B.   3:37. 

i6o. 
Classic.    Epil.  Pacch.  5  :  392. 

828.     236. 
Clavecinist.     R.   &  B.  3  :  28. 

42.5. 
Clavicithern.    Her.  Tr.  2  :  314. 

280. 
Claw-tips.    Imp.  Aug.  6  :  427  ;  7 : 

87.     C.  1002. 
Claws.    R.  &B.  3:2()6.     C.  520. 

82. 
Clay.    Stat.  &  B.  2  :  32G.     C.  285. 

80. 
Clay-ball.    Ari.  A.  5 :  153.    C.  649. 
Clay-clogged.     Red    Cott.    5:31. 

C.  748. 
Clay-cold.    Old  Piet.  2  :  43.    C.  178. 
Clean.    Red  Cott.  5 :  71.     C.  763. 

118. 
Clean-cut.    Plot-C.  6  :  266.    0.940. 
Clean-opposite.    Fifine,  4  :  415.    C. 

720. 
Clean-scooped.    Balau.  4 :  269.    C. 

604. 
Cleanly.      Bean-F.   6:403;   7:36. 

C.  992.     190. 
Cleanse.     Para.  1 :  67.     C.  27.  159- 
Cleansing-water.     Ari.  A.  5  :  207. 

C.  669. 
Clear.    Pan- 1 :  22.     C.  10.    68. 

Para.  1 :  55.     C.  23.     68. 

Clear-accepted.     R.   &  B.   3:24. 

C.  424. 
Clear-chronicled.     Shah  A.  6  :  243. 

C.  931. 
Clear-sighted.     Inn  A.  5  :  280.     C. 

788. 
Clear-witted.    Sor.  1 :  194.     C.  75. 
Clearance.     Ivkn,  6  :  131.     C  881. 

186. 
Cleared.     King  C.  1 :  394.     C.  155. 

175. 
Clearer-grained.    Karsh.  4:65.    C. 

338. 
Clearer-seers.      Soul's  Tr.  2 :  350. 

C.  294. 
Clearer-sighted.     King  V.  1 :  383. 

C.  151. 
Clearlier.     R.&B,  3:22.     C.  423. 

228. 
Clearings-up.      Straf.  1:184.      C. 

71.     91. 


Cleft.    Fifine,  4 :  .399.    C.  711.    70. 
Cleft-nursed.     R.  &  B.  3 :  379.    C. 

.563. 
Cleft-way.     Pan.  1 :  19.     C.  9. 
Clement  Marot.   Glove,  2:248.    C. 

257. 
Cleon.     Cleon,  4 :  115.     C.  358. 
Clench-fist.     Ari.   A.   5:121.      C 

(i37. 
Cleopatra.     Fifine,  4 :  390.    C.  705. 
Clerkly.    Red  Cott.  5 :  .33.    C.  749. 

58. 
Clients.    Ponte  A.  6 :  410 ;   7 :  53. 

C.  f>95.    20. 
Cliif-base.    Ari.  A.  5: 110.    C.632. 

97- 
Clilf-brow.     Dis.  Al.  4:176.     C. 

380. 
Climax.    R.  &  B.  3 : 1.35.     C.  468. 

52. 
Climb.    Para.  1:121.    C.  48.    187. 

Sor.  1 :  313.     C.  122.     109. 

Druses,  2  :  114.  C.  2(>i.  143. 

R.   &   B.   3:280.     C.   525. 

268. 

Pietro.  6 :  175.    C.  903.     92. 

Climbing.      Bean-St.   6:277.      C. 

944.     135. 
Climes.     Ari.   A.   5:107.    C.  631. 

156. 
Cling.   Flight,  2:292.    C.  272.  253. 
Clitumniau.    Prince  H.  4 :  375.    C. 

699. 
CUtumnus.     Prince  H.  4 :  379.     (7. 

700. 
Cloak-and-rapier.     R,  &  B.  3:49. 

C.  433.     235. 
Clock.    R.  dc  B.  3:366,     C.  557. 

226. 
Clock-face.     Red  Cott.  5:4.     C. 

737.    254. 
Clock-hand- wise.     Inn  A.  5 :  275. 

C.  786. 
Clock-house.    RedCott.  5: 15.    C. 

742. 
Clockhouse-chime.   Forgiv.  5 :  .359. 

C.  817. 
Clod.     Saul,  2 :  56.     C.  183.     92. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  103.     C.  4.55. 

Clods.     Ben  Ezra,  4: 186.     C.  383. 

56. 
Cloister-porch.      Old    Pict.   2:38. 

C.  176. 
Clombst.     Cleon,  4 :  120.     C.  360. 
Close.     Ari.  A.  5 :  156.     C.  651. 

74. 

Never.6:2a5.    C.  928.    226. 

Close-clipt.    Balau.  4:  308.   C.620. 


323 


Close-covered 


INDEX 


Close-grained 


Close-covered.    Guard.  Ang.  2 :  88. 

C.  104. 
Close-curled.   Colombe,  2: 191.    C. 

2;«. 

Close-nipped.    Solil.2:13.    C.  1C8. 
Close-packed.     Ivkn,   6 :  134.      C 

Closeiier.   Red  Cott.  5 :  71.   C.  763. 
Closet.    Ari.   A.   5:120.     C.  6:36. 

10. 

Closet-lectures.     R.   &  B.  3:197. 

C.  493. 
Closet-like.     Bad  D.  U.  6:396; 

7:17.     C.  989.     281. 
Closet-sUl.     R.   &  B.   3:29.     C. 

426. 
Closing-truth.   Sor.  1 :  317.    C.  124. 
Cloth-of-gold.    Numph.  0 :  350.    C. 

814. 
Cloth-shred.    Chas.  A.  6 :  354.     C. 

974. 
Clothe.     Para.  1:72.     C.29.     253. 
ClotpoU.     Pacch.  5:324.     C.  804. 
Cloud.      Balau.    4:302.      C.   617. 
286. 

Red  Cott.   5:53,      C.   756. 

217. 

Ari.    A.    5:100.      O.    628. 

279. 

Two  Poets,  6 :  77.     C.  859. 

239. 

EpU.  Fer.  6:283.     C.  946. 

165. 

Rev.  6 :  4.36  ;  7 :  105.  C.  1005. 

66. 
Cloud-harrieade.      Chris. -Eve,    4 : 

9.     C.  319. 
Cloud-companionship.     Ari.  A.  5: 

229.     C.  ()70. 
Cloud-cup's.     Pippa,   1:327.      C. 

129. 
Cloud-distUment.    Ari.  A.  5 :  115. 

C.  635. 
Cloud-fleck.      Inn  A.   5:273.     C. 

785. 
Cloud-fleece.    Bean-St.  6 :  273.    C. 

942. 
Cloud-girt.    Sor.  1 :  231.     C.  89. 
Cloud-Uke.    R,  &  B.  3 :  384.     C. 

.5(34.     253. 
Cloud-nourishing.     Ari.  A.  5  :  160. 

C.  652. 
Cloud-obstruction.      Ger.    de    L. 

6 :  350.     C.  973. 
Cloud-paU.     Numph.  5:350.     C. 

814. 
Cloud-prison.      Chris.  -  Eve,  4 :  5. 

C.  318. 


Cloud-rift.    Epil.  Fer.  6 :  283,     C, 

946.    75. 
Cloud-shape.     R.  «S:  B.  3  :  209,     C. 

497. 
Cloud-smoke.     Ger.  de  L.  6 :  349. 

C.  973. 
Cloud-Tophet.      Eas.-Day,   4 :  45, 

C.  331. 
Cloud-ward,     Ari.  A.  5 :  160.     C, 

652. 
Clouds.    Para.  1 :  106.  C.  42.    238. 
Cloudlets.  Para.  1 :  97.  C.  39.  120. 
Clown-king.    Ari.   A.  5:121.     C, 

637, 
Clown-Hke.    R.  &B.3:8.    C.417, 

285. 
Clowns.     R.  &  B.  3:  312.     C.  538, 

no. 
Club-drub.     Ari.   A.   5:170,      C. 

656.     168, 
Club-feast.     Ari.  A,  5:144,     C. 

646. 
Club-stick.    Soul's  Tr.  2:  352.     C, 

295, 
Clue,     King  C.   1:400.      C.   157. 
20. 
Fifine,  4 :  429.     C.J28.     30. 


Clump-clumped.     R.  &  B.  3 :  197. 

C.  492. 
Clugnet,Sir.    Colombe,  2 :  18.3.    C. 

231. 
Cluster-chord.      Sor,    1:318,      C. 

124. 
Co-embrace,    R.  &  B.  3: 157,     C. 

476, 
Co-equal,   Rev.  6 :  437 ;  7 :  107,    C. 

1006.     192. 
Co-exist,    ^or.  1:229.    C.  89.    252, 
Co-heir.     R.  &  B.  3: 105.     C.  456. 
Co-mates.    R.  &B.3:19.     C.422, 
Co-operant.     Ari.   A.   5 :  177,     C. 

659. 
Co-operation.    R.&B.3:312.     C. 

537.     240. 
Co-pleader.     Agam.6:25.    C.839. 
Coach-wheel's.       A  Blot,   2:143, 

C.  216. 
Coal.    Two  Poets,  6 :  78.     C.  859, 

235. 
Coal-black.     Her.  Tr.  2:316.     C. 
2S1.     107. 

Ari.  A.  5 :  114.     C.  6.34. 

Coarse.    Ari.  A.  5 :  170.     C.  656. 

46. 


Coarse-as-clay.    Ari.  A.  5 :  160.    C. 

652.     36. 
Coarse-grained.      A  Blot,   2 :  144. 
C.  216, 
324 


Coarsely -blacked 


INDEX 


Common 


Coarsely-blacked.    Sor.  1:270.    C. 

105. 
Coarsely-coated,    Ari.   A.   5 :  109. 

C.  (J56. 
Coarseness.     R.  &  B.  3:123.     C. 

4(33.     173. 
Coast-guard.     Inn  A.  5:244.     C. 

774. 
Coasting-pilot.    Herv4,  5 :  355.    C. 

81t). 
Coaxing-out.    Jocli.6:222.    C.  923. 
Cobweb-armory.     R.  &  B.  3:  274. 

C.  523. 
Cobweb-work.      Red  Cott.   5 :  5G. 

C.  757.     240. 
Cock-and-buU.     Inn  A.  5 :  262.     C. 

781. 
Cock-crow.     R.  &  B.  3:250.     C. 

514.     187. 
Cock's-comb.    R.  «feB.3: 282.     C. 

52(j.     130. 
Cocks'-brain-sauce.  Ari.  A.  5 :  126. 

C.  639. 
Cocoa-mat.    Inn  A.  5:  303.    C.  797. 
Cocoa-nut.    Fifine,  4:388.    C.  704. 
^59. 
Coetaneous.    Cenciaja,  5 :  370.    C 

822. 
Coffer-lid.     Sor.  1 :  207.     C.  80. 
Cog.    Holy-C.  2 :  317.  C.  282.    240. 
CoU.     R.   &   B.  3:364.     C.  557. 

235- 
Coincidence.    Sludge,   4 :  249.     C 

409. 
Cold.    Luria,2:385.    C.  308.    119. 

R.&B.3:48.     C.433.    91. 

Cold-blooded.       Sor.    1:280.       C. 

109.     198. 
Cold-pinnacled.    Fifine,  4:390.    C. 

705. 
Cold-writ.     Ari.    A.  5:104.      C. 

630.     236. 
Colenso.     Inn  A.  5 :  245.     C.  774. 
Colenso's.     Gold  Hair,  4 :  169.     C. 

378. 
Colewort-crop.     Red  Cott.   5 :  12. 

C.  740. 
Collecting-itch.      Red  Cott.   5:9. 
C.  739. 

Inn  A.  5 :  258.     C.  779. 

Collector's.      Inn    A.    5:260.     C. 

780.     39. 
CoUonge.     La  S.  6:54.     C.  850. 
CoUoped.    Childe   R.  2:332.     C. 

287. 
CoUoquized.      Trans.    4 :  57.       C. 

336. 
Color.    Luria,2:371.    C.303.    20. 


Color.    Ger.  de  L.  6:  346.     C.  971. 

61. 
Color-and-line  -  throw.      Chas.   A. 

6:359.     C  976. 
Color-up.     Prince  H.  4:368.      C. 

696. 
Colorable.    R.&B.3:46.     C.432. 
Columbine.      Fifine,    4 :  425.       C. 

726. 
Columnar.     Red  Cott.  6:40.     C. 

751. 
Comb.     Joch.  6 :  216.     C.  920. 
Combined.       Luria,     2:393.       C. 

311.     168. 
Combustion-ripe.     R.  &  B.  3:  414. 

C.  576.     105. 
Come.      Ger.   de    L.   6 :  352.      C. 

974.     49. 
Come-and-go.      The  Lab.  2:15. 
C.  168. 

A  Blot,  2 :  164.     C.  224. 

R.  &  B.   3:163.     C.  479. 

247. 
Comedy.     Ari.  A.  5: 162.     C.  653. 
Comet's.      R.   &    B.   3:235.      C. 

508.     131. 
Comfit-peltmg.    R  .   &  B.  3:185. 

C.  488. 
Comfort.      R.   &  B.  3:235.      C. 
508.     31. 

R.   &  B.  3:294.     C  531. 

163. 

In    a    B.   4:145.      C.   369. 

165. 

Abt    V.   4:184.       C.  383. 

172. 
Comforts.     Ben  Ezra,  4 :  186.     C. 

384.     II.    71. 
Comic-trimeter.    Chris.-Eve,  4 :  26. 

C.  325. 
Command.      A   Blot,  2:167.      C. 
226.     16. 

Two  Poets,  6:98.     C.  867. 

83.    . 
Commemoration  -  week.      Inn  A. 

5 :  264.     C.  782. 
Comminatory.      R.    &   B.   3:187. 

C.  4S9. 
Commiserating.      Toccata,    2 :  35 

C.  175.     220. 
Commisei-ation.     R.  &  B.  3:464. 

C.  59(i.     247. 
Commission.       Para.    1 :  30.       C. 

13.     I. 
Commodious.      R.    &    B.  3:  105. 

C.  456. 
Common.     Soul's  Tr.  2 :  355.     C 

296.     251. 


325 


Common 


INDEX 


Common.   R.&B.3:105.    C.  456. 

63. 

Flute-M.  6 :  4'22  ;  7 :  77.     C. 

1000.     208. 
Common-sensed.  Ger.  de  L.  6 :  344. 

C.  971.     199. 
Commonplace.      Red  Cott.   5 :  78. 
C.  7(iO.     162. 

Inn    A.    5:L'(iO.       C.     780. 

38. 
Commune.     Red  Cott.  5:8.      C. 

739. 
Communion  -  cup.       Gold    Hair, 

4 :  108.     C.  378. 
Commuted.     R.  &  B.  3:45.      C. 

432.     224. 
Companion-tinge.    Red  Cott.  5 :  9. 

C.  740. 
Coraparini.     R.  &B.  3:10.      C. 

418. 
Compass-box.      Red  Cott.   5:11. 

C.  740. 
Compass-point.     Colombe,  2 :  185. 

C.  252. 
Compassion's.      R.   &    B.   3:121. 

a  462.     43. 
Compensating.     R.  &B.3:99.    C. 

453.     208. 
Compensation.     R.   &   B.  3:427. 

C.  582.     207. 
Competition.     Geo.  B.  D.  6:322. 

C.  962.     174. 
Complete.     Ben  Ezra,  4 :  191.     C. 

385.     48. 
Completes.     R.  &  B.  3:371.     C. 

559.     252. 
Completeness.      Sor.    1 :  286.      C. 

111.     222. 
Composite.    Red  Cott.  5 :  35.     C 

749.    43. 
Compound.     Soul's  Tr.  2:  352.     C. 

295.     144. 
Comprehend.     Ari.  A.  5 :  130.     C. 

643.     47. 
Compulsion.     Para.  1 :  72.     C.  29. 

84. 
Computists.      Prince     H.    4:355. 

C.  691. 
Comte.      Prince    H.    4:341.      C. 

686. 
Conceal.    Bea.  Sig.  6 :  415  ;  7 :  63. 

C.  997.     217. 
Concede.      King    V.    1:389.      C. 

153.     209. 
Conceit.     R.  &  B.  3 :  429.     C.  582. 
69. 

Fifine,    4:426.       C.     726. 

2gi. 


Conscience 
C. 


Conception.    R.  &  B.  3:385. 

5(i5.     252. 

Sun,  6 :  252.     C.  934.    8. 

Concession.     Ari.  A.  5 :  122.      C. 

637.     133. 
Conclusion.     R.  &  B.  3:334.     C. 

545.     194. 

Fifine,  4:  441.    C.  734.    195. 

Cond^.      Two    Poets,    6:83. 


R.  &  B.  3 :  190. 


C. 


861. 
Condense. 

490. 
Condiment.     Eas.-Day,  4 :  39.     C. 

329. 
Conditions.     Sun,  6 :  252.     C.  934. 

154. 
Cone.     R.  &  B.  3:311.      C.  537. 

213. 
Confederate.     Pippa,  1 :  346.      C. 

136.     227. 
Confession-chair.       The    Confess. 

2:16._    C.  169. 
Confession-grate.     Forgiv.  5 :  358. 

C.  817. 
Confidence.     Colombe,  2 :  217.     C. 
245.     144. 

R.  &   B.   3:397.      C.  570. 

114. 
Confirmed,  R.  &  B.  3:296.     C. 
532.     130. 

Joch.  6 :  226.     C.  924.     265, 

Confusion  -  ward.      Fifine,    4 :  438. 

C.  733. 
Congee.      A    Blot,    2  :  144.       C. 

216. 
Conger -fashion.     Ari.  A.   5:106. 

C.  631. 
Conglobed.     R.  &  B.  3:384.     C. 

564. 
Congratulate.      Sor.    1:221.      C. 

86.     86. 
Congregate.      Eagle,    6:241.      C. 

930.     257. 
Connivancy.     R.  &  B.  3:19.     C. 

422.     41. 
Conquer.      R.   &   B.   3:415.      C, 

577.     165. 
Inn    A.    5:313.       C.     801. 

43. 
Conquered.      Fifine,    4 :  405.       C. 

714.     48. 
Conqueror.      Two    Poets,    6 :  114. 

C.  873.     237._ 
Conquest-granting.    Agam.  6 :  17. 

C.  836. 
Conscience.     Ari.  A.  5 :  169.      C 

656.     113. 
Pietro,6:180.     C.905.    34- 


326 


Conscience-Clear  INDEX 

Cords 

Cc^sdence-clear.    Eas.-Day,  4 :  45.  |  Conti.    R.&B.3:259      C  517 


C.331. 
^o^^j^nce-pTiek.     Worst,  4:170, 

^°^^^j^^<^^omples.  Retro,  6: 176. 

Conseien^e-|tricken.    R.  &  B.  3: 

^'^g'^^^n^e-twHch.     E.   &  B.  3: 

^c'sSf''^""^-    ^-  *  ^-  3:293. 

Consequence.    R.  &B.  3-108     n 
4()5.     23.  •    -  .    o. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  429.  C.  583.  162 


Contiguous.     R.  &  B.  3:335.     C 
.At,.     30. 

Co^ntract.    Old  Pict.  2 :  38.    C.  176. 
Contrapuntist.    Pacch.5:330     C 

oljf).      215.  ^* 

^<'»*™iLs.    Flute-M.  6:424-  7- 
^0.    C.  1001.  ^'-^,  /. 

Contrition.     R.  &  B.  3:452      C 
592.     115  '     ^' 

^^"23^  ^^-^"-^--^o.   c. 

Contrived.     R.   «fe   B.   3-307      r 
5.j().     41.  '•     ^- 


2-1,srT^^^''^-     Pied  PW,  I      148"       T^°i"C.2:72.     C.  189. 


^2:285.     C.  269. 
Conserves.     R.   &  B.  3:454 

Consolatbn-stakes.    Prince  H.  4: 
CoWler.  ■  R."^&  B.  3: 50.     C.  434. 

^•^'^^°^*-loving.    Agam.  6:26.     C. 

Constance.     In  a  B.    4:148.     C. 

CoiLstancy.     A  Blot,   2:148.      C. 

Constant.    R.  &B.3:26.     C.  424. 

:^%l,*^i^l.c^85i.  264. 


Co^n^tr^vert.   rifine,4:395.    C.  708. 

^alS'^^gf-      R-&B.  3:404. 

^°/^^^"*-'J">et.     R.  &  B.  3-17'> 
^-  4<So.     104  • 

*^ TSr't!' '  "^^  *  ^-  ^•■^'^^• 

Conyersancy;    R.&B.3:47-'      C 

599.     22.  • 

Converse.     R.   &  B.   3:129.     C. 

Co™.^B.&B.3:3S5.     0.565. 

^  ^..^.  u.o.-.     o.  «ol.     264     I  ^^f-^if't-transport.     Prince  H    4- 

Conster.    Sol  &B  6- '>0^)   V  ovi    L    ^^-     C*.  6iW.  «=  -a.  a. 

Consul-humor,  s'or.'  1 :  291,  C.  oS'''*'"" "  '^'^''  ^''"'-  ^  =  -^--  ^• 
^°Jl^"«e.  Straf.  1:171.  C.  T  X'^'^''-  '^^^^ian,  2 :  255.  C.259. 
Co^nsummaVely-creative.     Ari.  A.  r^Sbl"^'"'^-     ^wo  Poets,  6  :  86.    C. 

Contaminate".  '  r'.  &  B.  3 :  364  C   \  rT]\  i^H^'^i  ^  'J^'     C"-  50.    22^ 

5y7.     249.  ■o.Mi.  C.     Cool-blooded.     R.&B.3-13'>      n 

Contempt     Stnf    1 .  iko      /-.  -„         *"•  "* 

P^.^^Straf.  1 .  103.     C.  59.    Coop.     R.  &  B.  3 :  85.     C  447 

R-«fcB.3:420.    C  579     7,    nc^?*'^''^'"!?-     F'lst,  6 :  .373.     C.  9S'> 

^r—-  Inn  A.  5 :  260.    C  780   '  xU'    ^';i^-C<,phetua.     R.  &  B.  3    416! 
Content.    Para.  1 :  33.    (7  14     2^8     P     •- *V'-  r 

Colombe,   2:226.      C    ^4?'       Tfif'^-     ^^^^^   2:403.      C.  315 

198.  ■         •    „  -^V  • 

— --R.&B  3:99.    C.453.   210    r^^^'^-sto^e.    R.&B.3:73.     C. 
Contention.     Ari.   A     5-in'i       n   \  n        ,. 
629.     X97.  •   ^-   ^-l*^'-      C'.    Coprolite.     R.&B    3.015       n 

Contention-wooed.     Agam.  6:2"     r^%',?°\  '        " 

^  C.  838.  «  "  •  —    -      -  Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  320.     177 

C«'y.erminous.    Pacch.  5 : 325.     C.  \     c'^f  ^"glishm.  2.-260. 

Contest.     Ari.  A.  5:159.     a  652     Corct    1?  *£.V  ^r3•     C.  423. 
I.  I  ^OTds.    R.  <fe  B.  3 :  426.     C.  581. 

327 


Corderius  INDEX 

R.  &  B.  3:279.     C. 


Corderius 

525. 
Corelli.     R.  &  B.  3 :  28.     C.  425. 

Red  Cott.  5:7.     C.  739. 

Coiinua.     R.  &  B.  3  :  173.     C.  483. 

277. 
Cork-baU.    R.   &  B.   3:164.     C. 

47!l. 
Cork-crop.     Solil.  2  :  12.     C.  167. 
Cork-float.    Red   Cott.   5:50.     C. 

Cork-groves.     Para.  1 :  79.     C.  32. 
Corn-laws.     Englishm.  2 :  263.     C. 

262. 
Cornaro,  The.    Pippa,  1 :  349.     C. 

137. 
Comed-up.     Agam.  6  :  50.     C.  848. 
Corner.      Fust,    6:382.      C.    986. 

ig6. 

Cornfield.    R.  &  B.  3  :  6.     C.  416. 

80. 
R.   &  B.  3:396.     C.   570. 

83. 
Cornfield-side.     DeGus.2:45.    C. 


Red  Cott.  5:25. 


17.S. 
Cornice-block, 

C.  745. 
Cornice-wreath.     Love  in  L.  2 :  80. 

C.  191. 
Corolla  -  safeguard.         Chas.     A. 

6:363.     C.  97S.     169. 
Corpse.    St.  Prax.  4:91.     C.  349. 
33. 

Forgiv.  5 :  364.   C.  819.  186. 

Ceneiaja,   5 :  373.       C.  822. 

Ivkn,  6 :  140.     C.  886.     257. 

Corpse-clothes.     R.    &   B.  3 :  324. 

d  542. 
Corpse  -  companion.       Red    Cott. 

5 :  84.     C.  768. 
Corpse-conductor.     Balau.  4 :  287. 

C.  611. 
Corpse-face.    R.   &  B.  3:18.     C. 
421.     77. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  357.     C.  554. 

Corpse-fashion.      R.   &  B.   3:31. 

C.  426.     128. 
Corpse-like.     R.  &  B.  3:211.     C. 
498. 

Eas.-Day,    4:55.      C.   335. 

51- 
Corpse-wanness.      Inn  A.   5 :  277. 

d.787. 
Corpses.   St.  Mart.  5 :  352.    C.  814. 

90. 
Correct.    Pacch.   5:318.     C.   802. 

10. 


Counter-project 

R.   &  B.   3:5.     C. 
C. 


Correctness 
416.     77. 
Correggio.      A   Face,   4 :  219, 
39(). 

Fr.Fu.6:332.     Cm).    lO, 

Correggio's.      Inn  A.   5 :  252.     C. 
777. 
Fr.Fu.6:332.     C.966.    10 


Corruption.     Soul's  Tr.  2 :  355.    C. 
297.     15. 
Gold  Hair,  4 :  1G9.     C.  378. 


Cortona.     Bea.  Sig.    6 :  412 ;  7 :  57. 

C.  996. 
Cosimo.    Stat.    &   B.   2:322.     C. 

284. 
Cosimo  of  the  Medici.     Fra  Lippo, 

4 :  74.     C.  342. 
Cosseted.     Doctor,  6 :  184.     C.  907. 

95. 
Cosiness.      Red   Cott.    5 :  46.      C 

754. 
Cost.     Para.  1 :  105.     C.  42.     54. 

Luria,2:365.    C.  300.    177. 

R.    &  B.   3:334.      C.   546. 

122. 

Chris.  Sm.  6:  312.     C.  959. 

159. 
Costly.     Colombe,  2 :  230.     C.  250. 

81. 
Cottington.     Straf.  1 :  131.     C.  50. 
Couch.     R.&B.  3:270.     C.  522. 

39- 
Couch-foot.      Pippa,    1:.334.       C. 

132. 
Couch-side.    R.  &  B.  3:4.32.     C. 

584.     35. 
Couches.     Iim  A.  5 :  288.     C  791. 

138. 
Cough.    R.   &  B.  3:39.     C.  429. 

271. 
Cough  -  preludious.     Chris.  -  Eve, 

4 :  19.     C.  .322. 
Council-board.    Ari.  A.  5 :  151.    C 

649.  _ 
Council  -  chamber.        Prince     H. 

4 :  351.     C.  689, 
Counsel.    Luria,   2:362.     C.  299. 

201. 
Counsel-keeping.    Gondola,  2 :  268. 

C.  264. 
Counter-effort.     Sor.   1:308.      C. 

120. 
Counter-plea.     R.  &  B.  3 :  101.     C. 

454. 
Counter-pleadings.  R.  &  B.  3 :  361. 

C.  555. 
Counter-project.    Sor.   1 :  249.     C 

97. 


328 


Counterblast 

R.  &  B. 


INDEX 

44.     C. 


Crammed 


Counterblast 

431.     44. 
Counterfeit.     R.&B.  3:278.     C; 

5--'5.     156. 
Counterfeits.    Sor.  1 :  227.     C.  88. 

189. 
Counterpane.     Inn  A.  5 :  272,     C. 

78.5.     28. 
Country.     Inn  A.  5 :  244.     C-  774. 

139. 
Country-box.      Shop,   5:339.      C. 

801). 
Country-flavored.     Ari.  A.  5 :  144. 

C.  (J4(5. 
Country-parsonage.    Inn  A.  5 :  258. 

C.  779.  _ 
Country-pillage.     Chas.  A.  6 :  354. 

C.  974. 
Country-product.      Fifine,   4 :  38G. 

C.  70:3. 
Country-side.    A  Blot,  2 :  144.     C. 

210. 
Couplet-making.    Sor.  1:293.     C 

114. 
Courage.     Luria,  2 :  362.     C.  299. 
292. 

Two  Poets,  G:91.     C.  864. 

171. 
Course.     Para.  1:41.     C.  17.    142. 

Straf.  1 :  191.     C.  74.     291. 

R.  &  B.  3  :  93.    C.  451.   124. 

R.    &   B.   3 :  98.     C.   453. 

160. 

R.&B.  3: 169.    C.481.   30. 

Chris.-Eve,  4 :  41,     C.   330. 

277. 
Court.    R.  &  B.  3 :  333.     C.  545. 

Court  -  conventional.       R.    &    B. 

3:453.     C.  592. 
Court-edge.    Red  Cott.  5 :  32,     C. 

748. 
Court-hypocrisy.    Colombe,  2 :  183. 

C.  232. 
Court  -  ladies.      Which,      6:  400  ; 

7 :  28.     C.  i>91. 
Court  -  license.      Colombe,  2 :  224. 

C.  248. 
Court-lord.    R.  &  B.  3:442,     C. 

Court -polish.     Sol.  &  B.  6:200. 

C.  914.     95. 
Court-porch.     R.&B.  3: 132.     C. 

467. 
Court-vesture.     Inn  A.  5 :  252.     C. 

111.     76. 
Courtesv.      Colombe,  2:205.      C. 

241,    40. 


Courtesy.   R.&B.  3:  328.  C,  543. 

260. 
Courtier  -  company.     Two   Poets, 

6:87.     C  863.     219. 
Courtier-ways.      Colombe,   2 :  196. 

C.  2;>7. 
Courting.      Red  Cott,  5:14,      C. 

742.     241. 
Courtship-days.     A  Blot,   2 :  156, 

C.  221. 
Courtyard-paling.     Inn  A.  5 :  249, 

C.  776. 
Cousin  -  tribe.      Red   Cott.   5:89. 

C.  770. 
Coverture.     Red   Cott.  5 :  25,     C. 

745. 
Covertures.       Fifine,    4:393.      C. 

707.     235. 
Cow-house.     Ned  B.  6:144.     C. 

88S. 
Coward.    R.&B.  3:94.     C.  451. 

248. 
Coward-like.     Ari.  A.  5 :  182.     C. 

6(51. 
Coward's-weapon.     Ari,  A.  5 :  184, 

C.  6(il. 
Cowards.    Sludge,  4 :  235.     C.  403, 

159. 
Cowardice.     R.&B.  3:184.     C. 

488.     182. 
Cowper's.     Red    Cott.  5:7.      C. 

739. 
Coy-caressing.      Pan,   6 :  189,      C 

909. 
Crab.     Fifine,  4 :  417.     C.  721. 
Crab-sort.       R.  &  B.   3:76.      C, 

444. 
Crab-tree.     R.   &  B.  3:171.      C. 

4S2.     40. 
Crab-tree-fruit.      Ari.  A.  5  :  122, 

C.  637. 
Cradle-cone.     Red  Cott.  5 :  97,     C. 

773. 
Craft. 


R.  &  B,  3:369, 

270. 
R.   &   B.  3:372, 

207. 
Ber.  de  M.  6:298. 


C.  558, 
C.  560, 
C.  953, 

c. 
c. 


155.    . 

Craft-killing.     Agam.   6 :  34, 

842. 
Crag-tip.     Apol.  &  F.  6 :  291 

950. 
Cram.     Flight,  2 :  309.     C.278.    4. 
Ber.  de  M.  6 :  298.     C.  953, 

154- 
Crammed.     Red  Cott.  5 :  53.     C. 
756,     217, 


329 


Crambo 


INDEX 


Critics 


Crambo,     Two  Poets,  6:06.     C. 
8G6. 

Pambo,    6:235.       C.    928. 

i8o. 
Cranny.    K.  &  B.  3 :  190.     C.  490, 

241. 
Crane.    FUght,  2:292.     C.  272, 
Crapulosity,      Fust,    6 :  370,       C. 

981. 
Craven-trick.      R.   &  B.   3:360. 

C.  000. 
Crawl.     Para.  1 :  79.     C.  32.     229. 
Creaked.     R.  &  B.  3:  75.     C.  143. 

33. 
Cream.     R.  &  B.  3:21.     C.  423. 

36. 
Cream-and-curds.       Epil.    Pacch. 

5 :  390.     C.  82.S. 
Cream-clot.     Ari.  A.  5 :  172.     C. 

657. 
Cream-coated.     Flight,  2  :  296.    C. 


Red  Cott.  5:2. 
C. 


Cream  -  colored, 

C.  737. 
Cream-crest,     Mul^y.  6 :  164. 

897. 
Creates.     Evelyn,  2:24.     C.  171. 

143. 
Creation.     Bishop  B.  4, :  106,     C, 

.■355.    66. 
Creation's.    R.  &  B.  3:291.      C. 

530.     153. 
Creative.      R.    &   B.   3:386.      C. 

566.     94. 
Creature.     Fifine,  4:393.     C.  707. 

287. 
Creature  -  comforts.       Bishop    C. 

4 :  109.     C.  356. 
Creature-god.      Para.   1 :  102.      C. 

41. 

Creature-like.     Prince  H.  4:346. 

C.  688. 
Creatures.     Saul,  2:48.      C.  180. 

75- 
Creatureship.      Para.     1 :  99.      C. 

39. 
Credit-scratching.    R.  &  B.  3 :  75, 

C.  444. 
Creed.    R.  &  B.  3:397.     C.  570. 

II. 
Clive,     6  :  163.        C.  897. 

33- 
Creep-and  -  crawl.     Fifine,  4  :  415. 

C.  720.     263. 
Creephole,     King  V,  1:372,      C. 

14(i. 
Crepitant.    Master  H.  2 :  94,     C. 

196. 


Crepuscular.    R.  &  B.  3:  294,     C. 

531.     163. 
Crescent -mse.      Gondola,   2:266. 

C.  263. 
Crescents.     Crist.  &  M.  6 :  203,     C. 

915.     282. 
Crest.     R.  &  B.   3:5.      C.  416. 
^35- 
Crevice-sown.     Prince  H.  4 :  350. 

C.  689. 
Crew.    Straf .  1 :  164.     C.  63. 

Colombe,   2:204.      C.  240. 

228. 

R.   &    B.    3:27.      C.  425, 

287. 
Crib.     Fust,  6 :  36(5.     C.  979.    246. 
Cried.     R.  &  B,  3:64,     C.  439. 

129. 
Criers  -  forth.      Colombe,    2 :  185. 

C.  232. 
Crime.     Druses,  2:111,      C.  203. 
31. 

Stat.&B.    2:322.     C.  284, 

81. 

R.    &    B.   3:26.      C.  425. 

141. 

R.    &    B.  3:99.      C.  453. 

195- 

R.  <k  B.    3:248.     C.  513, 

30. 

R.   &  B.  3:369.      C.  558. 

277. 

R.    &   B.   3:371.      C.  559. 

225. 

Fra  Lippo,  4 :  80.     C.  345, 

179. 

Fifine,  4:  394.    C.  708.    263. 

Crimes.     Druses,   2:100.     C.  199. 
32. 

R.  &  B.  3:111.      C.   458. 

26. 
Criminal.     Ixion,  6  :  209.     C.  917. 

275. 
Crimson  -  quest.      Numph.  5:351. 

C.  814. 
Cripple  -  carpentry.       Red     Cott, 

5  :  78.     C.  766. 
Crippling-irons.    Sor.   1 :  316.      C 

123, 
Crisp-cut.     Earth's  I.  2:20.      C. 

170.     133. 
Criss-cross.     Fust,  6 :  375,     C  983, 
Critic-friend,     Balau.  4 :  328.     C, 

627. 
Critic-meed.    Old  Piet.  2 :  42.     C. 

177. 
Critics.    Two  Poets,  6: 95.    C.866. 
85. 


330 


Critical 


INDEX 


Critical.    R,  &  B.  3 :  21.     C.  423, 

log. 
Criticises.     Flute-M.  6 :  423  ;  7  :  78. 

C.  lUOO.     230. 
Crocus-dye.    Agam.  6  :  .33.    C.  842. 
Croisic-nature.     Two  Poets,  G :  81. 

c.  mi. 

Croisickese.      Herv^,  5 :  355.      C. 

81(j. 
Crook-and-cringings.         Colombe, 

2  :  185.     C.  233. 
Crook'd.     Fifine,  4:427,     C.  727. 

71. 
Crop.    Toccata,  2 :  36,    C.  17.5.    87. 

Ben  Ezra,  4  :  18G.     C.  384. 

120, 

Ari.   A.  5:232.       C,    678, 

218. 

Joch.  6:211.     0.918.    255. 

Crop-haired.     Inn  A.   5 :  260.     C. 

780.     180. 
Crop-headed.    Marching,  2:1.    C. 

163. 
Cross.     Imp.   Aug.   6 :  428 ;  7 :  88. 

C  1002.     42. 
Cross-buttock.    Two  Poets,  6 :  101 . 

C.  8(J8. 
Cross-gi-ained.    Para.  1 :  71.    C.  20. 
Cross-road.     R.   &  B.   3 :  15,     C. 
420. 

R,  &  B.   3:425.      C.   581. 

56. 
Cross-suit.     R.    &   B.   3:172.     C. 

483. 
Cross-way.     R.   &   B.  3:160.     C. 

478.     26. 
Cross-wind.    By  Fire.    2:59,     C. 

185. 
Cross-wise.    Solil.  2 :  13.     C.  168. 
Crossed.    Red  Cott.  5 :  71.    C.  763. 

35- 
Crossed-keys.    Druses,  2 :  103,    C. 

199. 
Crotchet-and-quaver,       Chas,   A. 

6:363.     C.  978. 
Crow-flight.    Red  Cott.  5 :  11.     C. 

740. 
Crow-Uke.     Red  Cott.   5:85.     C. 

768. 
Crow-nest.     Inn  A.  5 :  247.    C.  775. 
Crow-wise,     R.  &  B.  3:30.      C. 

426. 
Crowd.     Sor.  1:209.     C.  81.    143. 

Sor.  1 :  223.     C.  8().     260. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  199.     C.  493.     6. 

Ivkn,  6 :  140.     C.  886.    276. 

Crowders-round.    Colombe,  2 :  185. 

C.  232. 

331 


Cummin 
C.  432. 


Crown.    R.  &  B.  3:46 

271. 
Forgiv.    5:366.      C.     820. 

146. 
Crist.  &  M.  6 :  205.     C.  915, 

147- 
Crown-gi-asper,       Protus,    2 :  321. 

C.  283. 
Crowned.     Before,  2 :  87.     C.  194. 
66. 

R.   <fe   B.   3:340.      C.   548. 

174. 
Crownet.     hor.  1 :  254.     C.  98. 
Cruel-kind.     Joch.  6 :  219.    C.  921. 

215. 
Cruellest.      In  a    B.   4:131.      C. 

364.     47. 
Cruelty.     R.&B.  3:370.     C.  559. 

40. 
Crumb.     Ned  B.  6:  147.     C.  890. 

224. 
Crumble,     In  a  Y.  2:84.     C.  193, 

92. 
Crush-nosed,      Shop,    5 :  338,      C 

809. 
Crushing.     Straf.    1:165.     C.   63. 

82. 
Crust.     Para.  1:100.     C.  40.    135. 
Cry.     R.&B.  3: 8.     C.  417.     265. 
R.    &   B.   3 :  174.     C.   483. 

221 

Crystal.       R".    &    B.   3  :  125.      C. 
464.     3. 

R.   &  B.  3:257.     C.   517. 

199. 

Joch.  6,:  219.     C.  921.    4. 

Crystal-clear.      La  S.   6 :  70.      C, 

856. 
Crystal-pure.    Ari.  A.  5  :  166.     C. 

655. 
Crystal-shaft.     Para.  1 :  54.    C.  23. 
Crystallize.     Red  Cott.  5:52.     C. 

75().     283. 
Cuckoo-apple.    Ari.  A.  5 :  114.    C. 

6; '.4. 
Cuckoo-spits.     Fifine,  4 :  418.     C 

721. 
Cudgel-sweep.    Ari.  A.  5 :  142.    C. 

645. 
Cue-owls.    Andrea,  4 :  87.     C.  347, 
Cultivated.     Red  Cott.   5:3.     C. 

7-M.     174. 
Culture.     Fifine,   4:391.     C.   706. 
242. 

Two  Poets,  6 :  92.     C.  865. 

234- 
Culver.     R.  &  B.  3:  469.     C.  .598. 
Cummin.    Joch.  6:220.     C.  922. 


Cunning 


INDEX 


Cunning.    Pied  Piper,  2 :  286.    C. 

•'TO.     169. 
Cup.     Fra   Lippo,  4:79.     C.  344. 

. FiSie,  4:403.     C.  713.    88. 

La  S.  G :  GG.     C.  800.     268. 


Danae 

C. 


Fifine,  4:399.     C. 


up- 
C.  931. 
Cup  -  crown 

711. 
Cup-lily.    FHght,2:298.     C.  274^ 
Cupola-wise.     Fifine,   4:422.      C. 

Cupping-cloth.     Red  Cott.  5:41. 

Cm^cast:    R.&B.3:47      0.432. 
Curate-creature.      Inn  A.   o :  2.W. 

C.  780.     180. 
Curd.    R.&B.3:21.    C.  423.    36. 
Curd-white.   Englishm.  2:  2o9.    V. 

2G0. 
Cure.    Soul's  Tr.  2:  339.     C.  290. 

R.  &  B.  3:216.     C.  500. 

178. 

Death  in  D.  4 :  202.     C.  390. 

114. 

Fr.  Fu.  6 :  335.    C.  9G7.  209. 

Fr.  Fu.  6 :  341.    C.  970.  213. 

Cure-reportmg.      Shah  A.  6:245. 

Cured!    Eas.-Day,  4:53.     C.  334. 

ciling.    Sor.  1:199.     C.  77.    46. 
Curly-coated.    R.&B.3:430.    C. 

CiSy-pate.    R.&B.  3:279.     C. 

Client.    Para.  1:44.     C.  19.    29. 
Current-crost.      Agam.   G:8.      C. 

833. 
Curse.     Pau.l:14.     C.  7.     114. 
Soul's  Tr.  2:240.     C.  290. 

sS  Tr.  2 :  243.     C.  292. 

R.^&\3:15.   C.420.   I34- 

R.&B.  3:  438.  C.  586.  116. 

Bea.  Sig.  6 :  412  ;  7 :  58.    C. 

996.      116. 
Curse-collected.     R.  &  B.  3:163. 
C.  479.     43-  ^    ^^^ 

Curses.    Inn  A.   5:297.     C.   795. 

193- 
Cursed, 

244. 
Cursewise.     R.   &   B.   3:12.      C. 

419.    245. 
Curtain.    Para.  1:74.    C.30.    203 


Cushat-dove.    Red  Cott.  5 :  7. 

739. 
Cushion-carrier.    Red  Cott.  5 :  23. 

C.  745. 
Cut-across.     R.   &  B.   3:80.     C. 

445.     5. 
Cut-and-thrust.    R.   &  B.  3:415. 

C.  577.     68. 
Cut-beard.    R.   &  B.  3:116.     C. 

460.  ^ 

Cut-down.  Inn  A.  5:  284.  C.  790. 
Cut-thi-oat.  Pippa,  1 :  333.  C.  131. 
Cuthbert's.     ChildeR.2:333.     C. 

287. 
Cutting-the-Pack.     Inn  A.  5 :  243. 

C.  773. 
Cutting-process.   Bishop  B.  4 :  108. 

C.  356. 
Cuttle-fish.     CaUhan,  4:210.     C. 

.393. 
Cyclops-like.     Para.  1  :  110.     C. 

46. 
Cymbal-clash.      Chas.  A.  6 :  35o. 
C.  975. 


D 

J.    Lee,  4:163.  C. 

Old  Pict.  2 :  38.  C. 

R.  &  B.  3:39.  C. 


R.  &  B.  3:G4.     C.  439. 


Da  Vinci. 

376. 
Da  Vincis. 

176.     50. 
Dab  -  chick 

4:30. 
Dab-pot.    Pacch.  5:327.     C.  806. 
Dabitur.     Twins,  2:276.     C.  266. 

46. 
Dagger  -  plaything.       Bea.     Sig. 

6  :  419  ;  7  :  70.     C.  999. 
Dagger-wounds.    R.  &  B.  3 :  238, 

C.  509. 
Daily.      Luria,   2:  381.      C.    30(. 

20. 
Daisy-dappled.     Red  Cott.  5:30. 

Dallied.'  Doctor,  6:184.     C.  907. 

216. 
Dalmatic.     Miscon.  2  :  73.     C.  189. 

149. 
Damfreville.     Herv^,  5:354. 

815. 
Damis.     Two  Poets,  6:111. 

872. 
Damnified.      Inn   A.  5:2/6. 

7.S6.     233. 
Damsel-fly.    R.  &  B.  3:453 

5q9 
Danae.     R.  &  B.  3:77.     C.  444 

205. 


332 


Dance 


INDEX 

C.  542. 
570. 


Dance.    R.  &  B.  3:325 

285. 
R.   &  B.  3:396.     C. 

83. 
Ben  Ezra,  4 :  190.     C.  385. 

194. 
Dancing-foot.     Ari.  A.  5 :  152.     C. 

649. 
Dandiprat.    R.  &  B.  3 :  468.     C. 

597. 
Dandle.     R.  &  B.  3  :  39.     C.  429. 

285. 
Danger.     R.  &  B.  3 :  244.     C.  511. 

241. 
R.  &  B.  3:3&5.     C.  565. 

243. 
Dangerous.    Luria,  2:374    C.304. 

51- 
Bishop  B.  4:100.     C.  353. 

119. 
Dante.    Sor.  1 :  306.     C.  119.    180. 

Touch,  C.  910. 

Dare.     Ben  Ezra,  4 :  186.     C.  384. 

242. 
Dare-devil 

433.     235. 
Dared.     Last  R.  2 :  280, 

104. 
Abt  V.    4:185, 

206. 

La  S.  6 :  54.     C.  849, 

Daret.      Two  Poets,  6:88 


R.  &  B.  3:49.  C. 
C.  268. 
C.   383. 


863. 
Daring.     R.  &  B.  3  :  178.     C.  485. 

278. 
R.   &  B.  3:456.     C.  593. 

48. 
Ari.    A.    5:162.      C.    653. 

91. 
Darings.     Ber.  de  M.    6 :  295.     C. 

952.     82. 
Dark.     Pau.  1 :  25.     C.  11.     90. 

Para.  1 :  91.     C.  37.     206. 

Straf .  1 :  149.     C.  57.     90. 

Her.  Trag.  2 :  316.     C.  281. 

142. 
R.    &    B.  3:92.      C.  450. 

90. 
Dark-blue.     A  Blot,  2:158.     C. 

222 

Dark-brown.     R .  «fe  B .  3 :  257.     C. 

516. 
Dark -featured.     Red  Cott.  5:4. 

C.  737. 
Dark-leaved.     Ari.  A.  5:113.     C. 

633. 
Dark's.    Ger.  de  L.    6:348,     C. 

972.    23. 


D  ay-of- Judgment 
Death  in  D.  4:  199.    C. 
R.  &  B.  3:454.     C. 
Red   Cott.  5:20, 


Darkling. 

3.S,S.     69 
Darkness. 

59.i.     45. 
Darling  -  like. 

C.  743.     79. 
Darling-of-thenSummertime.    Ari. 

A.  5:123.     C.  6;«. 
Darlingly.     Red  Cott.  5 :  37.     C. 

750. 
Darlingness.     Ari.  A.  5:114.     C. 

634. 
Dartles.    Star,  2:  59.     C.  185. 
Date.     Twins,  2 :  276.     C.  266. 
Date  -  gathering.      Glove,    2 :  248. 

C.  257. 
Datura.     R.  &B.  3:12.     C.  419. 
Daub-brush.     Pacch.  5 :  327.     G. 

80(5. 
Daughter-stream .    R .  &  B .  3 :  256. 

C.  516. 
Daughters.     R.  &  B.  3:75.      C. 

444.     142. 
Dauntless.     Childe  R.  2: 336.     C. 

289.     226. 
David.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  355.     C.  297. 
Dawn.    R.  &  B.  3:294.     C.  531. 
163. 

Rev.    6 :  434  ;     7 :  102.       C. 

1005.     126. 
Dawn-doomed.     Chas,   A,   6 :  360. 

C.  977. 
Dawn's.     R.  &  B.  3 :  251.     C.  514. 

253. 
Day.    Pau.  1:7.     C.  4. 

Sor.  1 :  314.     C.  123.     174. 

Pippa,  1 :  365.    C.  144.    172. 

Pippa,  1 :  366.     C.  144.    34. 

Soul's  Tr.  2:  345.     C.  292. 

194. 

R.   &   B.  3:264.      C.  519. 

226. 

R.    &   B.   3:325.      C.   542. 

196. 

R.   &  B.  3:463.     C.  596. 

213. 

J.  Lee,  4: 153.     C.  373.    30. 

St.  Mart.  5:354.      C.  815. 

138. 

Ben    K.    6:385,      C.    372, 

210. 

Rev.    6:434;    7:102.       C. 

1005,     126. 
Day-daAVTi.     Druses,  2 :  102,      C. 


199. 
Day-long.    Agam.  6:4.     C.  831, 
Day  -  of  -  Judgment,      Red   Cott. 

5:29,     C,  747, 
333 


Day-splendor 


INDEX 


Death 


Dav-splendor.     Ger.  de  L.  6 :  348. 

(J.  972. 
Dav-spiinsr.     R.&B.  3:305.     C. 

5()9.     75. 
Day-work.    Fifine,  4 :  426.    C.  726. 

4- 
Day's-end.     Colombe,   2:193.     C. 

236. 
Days.    Stat.  &  B.  2 :  326.     C.  285. 
46. 

Saul,  2 :  340.     C.  290.     272. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  103.    C.  455.    34- 

R.&B.  3:  263.   C.  519.    84. 

Inn  A.  5 :  261.     C.  780.     54. 

Daybreak.    R.&B.  3: 15.    C.  420. 

Si- 
Daylight.     Inn  A.  5 :  288,     C.  791. 

57- 
Dayspring.    Shah   A.    6:245.     C 

931.     172. 
De  Chevaye.      Two  Poets,  6:89. 

C.  864. 
De  Lorge.     Glove,  2 :  247.     C.  256. 
D'Ormea.    King  V.  1:370.    C.  145. 
Dead.     Para.  1 :  84.     C.  34.     267. 

Pippa,  1:335.    C.  132.    103. 

Pippa,  1:341.     C.  134.    3. 

Sor.  1 :  194.     C.  75.     189. 

Saul,  2:  48.     C.  180.     77. 

Patriot,  2 :  233.  C.  252.  259. 

Gram.  Fun.  2 :  310.     C.  279. 


R 


103. 


B.  3:137.     C.  468. 


R.   &  B.  3:171.     C.  482. 

240. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  198.    C.  493.   95. 

R.&B.  3: 278.    C.525.    82. 

R.&B. 3:  416.    C.577.    32. 

R.&B. 3:  420.    C.579.    73. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  453.    C.  592.    86. 

J.  Lee,  4 :  157.    C.  374.     97. 

Balau.  4 :  310.     C.  621,     47. 

Ari.  A.  5:101.   0.629.   141. 

Ari.  A.  5:112.   C.  633.   165. 

Ari.  A.  5:136.    0.643.    26. 

La  S.  6 :  61.     C.  852.     205. 

Dead-asleep.    R.&B.  3:94.     C. 

451. 
Dead-beaten.      Englishm.    2:258. 

C.  260. 
Dead-blanched.     Halbert,  6:130. 

C.  880. 
Dead-house.      App.    Fail.    4 :  257. 

C.  412. 
Dead-lock.    Sor.  1 :  288.     C.  112. 
Dead-one.    Sludge,  4 :  233.    C  397. 
Dead-still.    Sor.  1 :  245.     C.  95. 


Dead-weight.    R.&B.  3:15.     C. 

420. 
Dead-weights.    R.&B.  3: 42.     C. 

430.     136. 
Deadness.    Another  W.  2 :  76.     C 

190.     250. 
Deafish.     Bifur.  5 :  346.     C.  812. 
Dear.      Pict.   Ig.   4:73.      C.   342. 

252. 
Two  Poets,  6 :  89.     C.  864. 

259. 
Dearer.    Shah  A.  6:  245.     C.  031. 

172. 
Death.     Para.  1 :  35.     C.  15.     226. 

Para.  1 :  44.     C.  19.     231. 

Sor.  1 :  313.     C.  122.     I. 

King    V.   1:380.      C.    153. 

164. 

Saul,  2 :  57.     C.  184.    213. 

A  Blot,  2: 157.   C.  222.    180. 

A  Blot,  2:173.   0.228.  150. 

Childe  R.   2:335.     C.  28.^. 

167, 
Soul's  Tr,  2:338.     C.  289. 

135. 

R.&B.  3:  90.   C.  450.   203. 

R.&B.  3: 130.  C.469.  148. 

R.&B. 3: 210.  C.498.  115. 

R.&B. 3:  259.  C.517.   136. 

R.&B.  3:  264.  C.  519.  226. 

R.&B.  3:  277.   C.  524.  150. 

R.&B.  3:  331.    0.545.    65. 

■ — —R.&B.  3:  413.     C.  576.    4- 

R.&B.  3:  436.  C.  586.   137. 

R.&B.  3:  448.    C.  590.    11. 

R.&B.  3:  455.  C.  593.  268. 

R.&B. 3: 456.  C.593.  137. 

Fra  Lippo,  4:79.     C.  344- 

82. 

DisA1.4:177.    C.380.   146. 

Fifine,  4:  434.    C.  730.    165. 

Fifine,  4:444.    C.  736.    146. 

Red  Cott.  5:96.     C.   773. 

215. 

Ari.  A.  5: 101.    C.  629.    141. 

Ari.  A.  5 : 1.36.    C.  643.    199. 

Inn  A.  5:  270.    0.784.    242. 

La  S.  6 :  66.     C.  855.     268. 

Pietro,  6 :  179.     C.  738.     21 . 

Joch.  6 :  233.     C.  927. 

—  Apol.  &  F.  6 :  294.     C.  951. 

132. 
Ber.  de  M.  6 :  296.     C.  952. 

290. 
Dan.  Bar.  6 :  310.     C.  958. 

47- 

Ben  K.  6:  385.    C.  372.   210. 

R.  Brown,  C.  947. 


3M 


I 


Death 


INDEX 


Death.    Epitaph,  C.  948.     io8. 
Death-bed.      Fr.    Fu.   6:329,      C. 

;m;.^.    275. 

Death-be^drt.      Ivkn,    6:131.     C. 

881.     186. 
Death-blow.     Druses,  2:108.      C. 

201. 
Death-bringing.     Agam.  6 :  35.    C 

843. 
Death-chamber.     Red  Cott.  5 :  59. 

C.  T.-iS. 
Death-damps.     Two  Poets,  6 :  79. 

C.  8(;o.    175. 
Death-day.     Red  Cott.  5 :  58.     C. 

758. 
Death-doom.      Agam.   6:12,      C. 

8.35. 
Death-doom'd.     Helen's  T.  6 :  386. 

C.  (iOl. 
Death-tloomed.      M.-m.  Meg,   6: 

4fKl ;  7  :  40.     C.  a>3. 
Death-hour.    R.&B.  3:455.     C. 

593. 
Death-in-Ufe.     R.&B.  3: 221.    C. 

502. 
Death-mist.     Fr.  Fu.  6:331.     C. 

9*35.     20. 
Death-pang.     La  S.  6 :  66.     C  855. 

Death-sweat.     Druses,   2:99.     C. 

19S. 
Death-throe.     R.&B.  3:308.     C. 

53(5. 
Death-trap.      Para.  1:107.      C 

42. 
Death-veils.     Artemis,  4 :  62,     C. 

337, 
Death-watch,    Mesmer.  2 :  243.    C. 

255. 
Death-watch-tick.    R .  &  B.  3 :  178. 

C.  485. 
Death-white.    A  Blot,  2:166,     C. 

225. 
Death's.    Up  — Doavh,  2:33.     C. 
174.     44. 

R.   &  B.   3:220.     C.   502. 

205. 

R.   &  B,  3:426,     C,  581, 

129. 

Caliban,      4:213.      C.  394. 

279. 

La  S.  6:67.     0.855.     II. 

Death's-due.     Balau,  4:272,      C. 

Debase.     Fifine,   4:415.     C.  720. 

134- 
Debaucher\''s.      Fust,   6:369.     C. 
980.     106. 


Deflect 

C.  978. 


Debts.    Chas.  A.  6:. 362 

171. 
Decadence.    Red  Cott,  5 :  28.     C. 

747.     10. 
Decaj'.     Pau.  1 :  16.     C.  8.    259. 

Para.  1 :  28.     C.  12.     12. 

Para.  1 :  81.     C.  33.     275. 

Deceiving,     Para.    1 :  100.     C.  40. 

49. 
Decency.    R.&B.  3:  295,    C,  531, 

33. 
Decide.   Straf.  1:191.    C.  74.   291. 

R.&B.  3:442.    C.  588.   83. 

Declined.     Lost  L.  2:4.     C.  IW. 

142. 
DecoUate.     R.   &   B.  3:464.     C. 

5',HJ. 
Decoyed.    R.  &  B.  3 :  117.     C.  460. 

82. 
Decrassify.     Bishop  B.  4: 108.     C. 

356. 
Decry.     R.  &  B.  3:342.     C.  549. 

57- 
Deed.    Soul's  Tr.  2:  347.     C.  293. 
244. 

Echet.  6 :  154.     C.  893.     98, 

Deeds.     Pau.  1:9.     C  5.     204. 

Sor.  1 :  240.     C.  93.     291. 

Toccata,  2 :  .3().    C.  175.   139. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  111.  C.  45s.  254. 

R.   &   B.   3:367.      C.  558, 

215. 
Ari.A.5:108,   C.632.   237 


,."'£ 


Deep-cutting.     Ari.  A.  5 :  139. 

644. 
Deep-down.     Flute-M.  6:420;   7: 

73.     C.  999. 
Deep-eyed.     Pau.  1 :  21.     C.  9. 
Deep-Uned.     Two  Poets,  6 :  95.    C. 

86(i.     42. 
Deep-trenched.     Sor.  1:288.      C. 

112. 
Deepei^thinkers.      Soul's    Tr.    2: 

350.     C.  294. 
Deeplier.     Pau.  1 :  21.     C.  10. 
Deer-herd.  A  Blot,  2 :  159.    C.  222. 
Defeat.    R.  &  B.  3:83,     C,  447. 
243. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  443.    C.  588.    79. 

Pillar,  6:268.    C.  940.    127. 

Apol.  &  F.  6 :  292.     C.  951. 

259. 
Defect.    Sludge,  4:250.     C.   409. 

36. 
Defender,    Inn  A,  5:  314,     C,  801. 

16. 
Deflect.    Prince  H.  4 :  378.    C.  700, 

283. 


335 


Deformity 


INDEX 


Destroy 


Motmitr.    Fifin.,4:«5.   C.720.|D.«*W.     Death  in  D.  4 :  Iffi. 
DSi„ro„ped.   G„.deL.0:344.    ReE^l^bL. ^^JjS,    fiS 


De^^ee.^'  Last  R.  2 :  281.     C.  2G8. 

Deity-like.    Red  Cott.  5 :  43.     C. 

752 
Delays.    In  Three   D.    2:82.     C. 

192.     286. 
Delicately-pompous .    Again  .G:  ^l. 

C.  838. 
Delight.    Pan.  1:15.*    176. 

^Sor.  1:203.     C.  7!>.     231. 

Sor.  1:315.     C.  123.     255. 

Fifine,  4:429.     C.  728.     30 

Delirious.    R.   &    B.    3:390.     C. 

507.     139.  ,       nn^-c  d. 

Deliriously -drugged.      Jbifaue,    4. 

389.     C.  705.  „     „    ,„,      ^ 

Deluding.     R.   &    B.   3:434.     C. 

Delusions.     Para.    1:<9.     O.    3.i. 

Delver-like.    Prince  H.  4 :  333.    C. 

Denigods.    R.   &   B.   3:174.     C. 

483.     244.  ^ 

Demiourgos.     Ai-i.  A.  5 :  120.     0. 

636.     242.  .^  ,.-, 

Demiurge      Sor  1:285.     cm. 
Deniers.     Pisgah    II.    5:34.^.     O. 

810 
Denying.     Family,  6 :  248.     C.  933. 

49 

Depart.    Para.  1 :  61.     C.  25.  12. 
Depend.     Fifine,   4:413.     C.   719. 

282.  „ 

Depicturing.    R.  &  B.  3:  290.  C. 

531      128 

Deprecate.    R.  &   B.   3:399.  C. 

Deprecating.    R.  «feB.3:338.     C. 

Depths,  v..  &B.  3:62.     C  436. 
276. 
-Chris.-Eve,4:31.      C.   327 

21. 


Desert  -  brute.     Colombe,    2:200. 

Desert-people.     Para.    1:38.      C. 

Desert-place.     Flight,    2:306.     C 

111. 
Desert-spectre.    Prince  H.  4:  339. 

Desert-spring.     Ber.  de  M.  6:  301. 

C.  954. 

Desertion.     Ari.    A.    5:153.  O. 

(j49.     228.  _^ 

Deserve.     Ohilde    R.    2:3.32.  C. 

287.     277.  ^ 

Deserves.    Soul's  Tr.  2:340.  C. 

290.     221. 

Desforges.     Two  Poets,  6 :  99.  G. 

Deshoulifere's.     Two  Poets,  6 :  100. 

C.  868.  ,„      „ 

Desiderated.    Red  Cott.  5 :  18.     C. 

743 
Desire.     Bishop  B.  4: 106.     C  355. 

Desk-drudge.     Clive,    6:158.     C. 

894. 
Desk-use.     Fust,  6:  378      C.  984. 
Desk-velvet.    Master  H.  2 :  93.    L. 

Despair.     Straf.    1:133.      C.  51. 

A^Blot,  2 :  147.     C.  218.  38. 

In  a    B.    4:139.     C.    367. 

276. 

Sludge,  4:  251.  C.  410.  265 

Ari.     A.    5:240.     C.    686. 

Chril'Sm.  6:313.     C.  959. 

GJr°"de  L.  6:348.     (7.972. 

Chas^"A.   6:364. 
173- 


C.  978. 


Desperation.      Clive,    6:163.      C. 

Ar"A.5:109.    C.  632.  115.  I  De«Sse.'^!"5«'l,5^ott.     5:32.      C. 

Descend.     Dis  Al.  4 :  175.    C.  380.    ^^^^-  ^74-^  _  ^^0.     C.    636. 

DeSbedR.&B.   3:458.     ^^-L  /,°7y.    Flight,  2 :  309.     C. 

Desert      Para.  1:36.     C.  16.     21.  -'»•       ."T . ". 01  . 7 .  05        C. 

1!!^  R     &    B.    3 :  99.      C.   453.    Reph-      <-  "^Sl '  ^  •  «^- 

R"°iB     3-174.     C.   483.    Destroy.    R:&B.3:368.     C.558. 

244.     ■  1     "5. 

336 


Destruction-stuff 


INDEX 


Destruction-stuff.    Ari.  A.  5:191. 

c.  im. 

Detest.     Para.  1:62.     C.  26.     29. 
Devil.     Para.  1 :  98.     C.  ».).    228. 

Sor.  1:261.     C.  101. 

K.   &    B.  3:208,     C.  497. 

195. 
R.   &    B.  3:417.     C.  578. 

213. 
R.   tfe    B.  3:426.     C.  581. 

23. 
R.   &    B.  3:438,     C.  586. 

227. 
Chris.-Eve,    4:5.     C.    317. 

38. 
Too  Late,  4:178.     C.  381. 

241. 

Sludg-e,  4 :  256.     C.  412.  67. 

IimA.  5:287.     C.  791.  123. 

Clive,  6: 161.     C.  896.    203. 

Don.  6: 195.     C.  911.     19. 

Geo.  B.  D.  6:  324.     C.  963. 

47- 
Devil's.    Straf.  1 :  132.  C.  51.  235. 

Crist.  2 :  19.     C.  170.     126. 

Lovers'   Q.   2:29.     C.  173. 

87. 

ChUde  R.  2:332.     C.  287. 

243. 

R.   &    B.  3:470.     C.  598. 

16. 
Devil's  -  doctrine.     Prince    H.    4: 

368.     C.  69(). 
Devil's-dung.    R.    &    B.    3:122. 

C.  4(i2.     216. 
Devil's-fun.    R.&B.  3:232.     C. 

507. 
Devil's-game.    Fra    Lippo,  4:78. 

C.  343. 
Devil's-marriage.    Inn  A.   5 :  292. 

C.  793. 
Devil's-purpose.     Colombe,  2 :  212. 

a  243. 
Devil's-smithy.     The   Lab,   2 :  14. 

C.  168. 
Devils.    R.&B.  3:470.     C.  598. 

16. 
Devil's  -  dung.    Red  Cott.    5 :  35. 

C.  749. 
Devotion-fit.    Red  Cott.  5 :  93.    C. 

771. 
Dew-coolness.    Inn  A.  5 :  270.     C. 

784. 
Dew-drenclied.    Agam.    6:4.     C 

831. 
Dew-drop.    R.  «fe  B.  3:294.     C. 

531.     163. 
Dew-gems.    Jocli.  6:225,     C.  924. 


Die 

C. 
C. 
C. 

a 


Dew-globule.    R.  &  B.  3 :  424. 

581. 
Dew-pearled.     Pippa,    1 :  337. 

133. 
Dew-prime.      Fifine,     4 :  396. 

709. 
Dewdrop.     R.   &    B.    3:324. 

542.     213. 
Dewdrop  -  fashion.      Flute-M.    6 : 

420  ;  7 :  73.     C.  999. 
Dewy-comfort.    Agara.  6 :  43.     C. 

846. 
De^vy-dear.    R.&B.  3:111.     C. 

458. 
Dewy-dimmed.    R.    &    B,   3:65, 

a  440.     68. 
Dexter-hand.    Nat.  in  D.  2 :  8.    C, 

l(i6. 
Diadems.     Fr.  Fu.  6 :  333.     C.  966. 

45-      , 
Diamond 

275.^ 
R.  &   B.  3  :  331 

150- 

Inn  A.  5:252.     0.777.  138. 

Diamond-cave.    Red   Cott.   5 :  44. 

C.  752. 
Diamond-dealing.     Red  Cott.   5: 

46.     C.  753. 
Diamond-dints.      Red   Cott.   5 :  5. 

C.  738. 
Diamond-flake.      R.    &   B.  3:  27. 

C.  425.     26. 
Diamond-necklace-dealing.      Red 

Cott.  5:14.     C.  742. 
Diana.     Two  Poets,   6: 103.      C. 

869. 
Dice.    R.   &  B,  3:442.     C.  588. 

258. 
Dickens.     Inn  A.  5:  285.     C,  790. 
Pacch.  5:331.     C.  807, 


Straf.   1:155,     C.   59. 
C.   545. 


Dictatress.    In  a  B.  4 :  146.    C.  370. 
Die.     Pau.  1:13.     C.  7.     161. 

Para.  1 :  47.     C.  20.     34- 

Para.  1 :  53.     C.  22.     203. 

Straf.  1 :  192.     C.  74.     80. 

Sor.  1:292.     C.  114.     289. 

King   C.   1:403.       C.    159. 

156. 

Saul,  2 :  52.     C.  181.     136. 

Any   Wife,  2:70,     C,  188. 

222 

Women  &  R,  2 :  85.     C,  193. 

M3. 
Colombe,    2:196,      C.   237, 

198. 
Stat.  &  B.  2 :  327.     C.  285, 

232, 


337 


Die 


INDEX 
C.  496 


Disdain 


Die.    R.   &  B.  3:206 

140. 

R.  &B.3:265.     C.519.    5- 

R.&B.3:403.    C.  572.  45- 

. Fifine,  4:395.     C.  70^;.    20. 

Ari.A.5:129.^C.640.  141. 

Cenciaja,    5 :  373.      C.   823. 

124. 

La  S.  f> :  63.     C.  854.     148. 

Mary  W.   6:206.     C.   910. 

Dau.'^Bar.  6:  309.     C.  957. 

53-  r,  . 
Dies.  Pau.  1 :  7.  C.  4. 
Gram .  Fun.  2 :  312.     C.  280. 

109. 
Ger.  de  L.  6:  352.     C.  974. 

141. 


Diest.    Cleon,4:121.    C.m\.    47- 

Died.     Para.  1 :  64.     C.  26.     258. 

R.    &   B,   3:31.       C.   426. 

106. 

R.  &B.  3:35.     C.  428.    5- 

R.    &   B.  3:328.      C.  543. 

260. 

Ari.A.5:171.     C.656.    79. 

Shah   A.   6:243.      C.  931. 

236. 
Different.    In  a  Y.  2:  84.     C.  193. 

143- 
R.    &   B.  3:329.      C.  509. 

Difficult.^"^.   &  B.  3:263.     C. 

.519.     189.  ^ 

Diffidence.    Geo.  B.  D.  6:  324.    C. 

<it«.     228.  _ 

Dig.      R.    &   B.   3:424.     C.   581. 

246. 
Digest.    Prol.Fer.6:240.    C.  929. 

188. 
Digging-job.    Prince  H.  4:  333.    C. 

Di'Sity,  Sir.    R.  «feB.3:429.     C. 

5s:j.    58. 
Dignity.    Straf.  1:178.    C.  68.   62. 
Dikast      Ari.A.  5:101.     C.  029. 
DUuted.    Para.  1:84.    C.  34.    166. 
Dim.     Pau.  1 :  0.     C.  4.     274. 

Epil.   Mihrab,    6:250.      C. 

930.     255. 
Dim-delicious.       Caliban,    4 :  208. 

C  392. 
Dini-descried.     Last  Ride,  2 :  281. 

C.  2(W. 
Dim-discerned.    Fifine,  4:391.    C. 

700. 
Dine.    Likeness,   4:220.     C.  390. 


Diner-out.    Sludge,  4 :  240.  C.405. 

Duier.    R.  &  B.  3: 123.     C.  463. 

250. 
Diuner-time.    R.  &B.3:453.     C. 

592. 
Dinned.    R.&B.  3:366.     C  557. 

188 

Diodati.     La  S.  6:73.     C.858. 
Dirt.    R.   &  B.  3:312.     C.  538. 

no. 
Dirt-cheap.     Inn  A.   5:251.      C. 

776. 
Dirt-shoes.    Pietro,  6  :  175.   C.  903. 
Disagree.      Red  Cott.  5:29.      C. 

747.     263. 
Prol.  Dra.  I.  2d,  6 :  153.     C. 

892.     222. 
Disappointment.    Joch.6:220.    C. 

922.     227. 
Apol.  &  F.  6 :  292.     C.  951. 

149.                      .    _„  ,, 

Disapproval.    RedCott.  5:  57.  C. 

758.     248. 

Disbelieve.    R.  &  B.  3:417.  C. 

.578.     29. 
Discard.    Red  Cott.  5: 18.    C.  743. 
291. 

Inn  A.  5:  240.     C.  775.  87. 

Discept.      Master   H.   2 :  94.  C. 


19(i. 
Disclaim.     Colombe,   2:209.      C. 

940      go 
Dkclose.     Inn  A.  5  :  2%.     C.  794. 

217. 
Disclosure.     La  S.  6  :  54.     C.  849. 

94 
Discolored.     King  C.   1:412.     C. 

102.     61. 
Disconcert.    Sor.  1 :  280.     C.  111. 

76. 
Discords.     Abt  V.  4 :  185.     C.  383. 

102. 
Discount.        Gram.    Fun.    2:312. 

C.  280.     118. 
Discretion.     R.   &   B.   3:91.     C. 

450.     172. 
R.    &   B.   3:343.     C.   549. 

202. 

Ka^h.      4:65.       C.    338. 

292. 
Red   Cott.   5:31.     C.    748. 

291. 
Discussible.    Prince  H.  4 :  359.    C. 
693.  „    „„^ 

Disdain.    Inn  A.  5  :  260.     C.  780. 

156. 
Numph.  5 :  348.    C.  813.  84. 


338 


Disease 


INDEX 


Dizened 


Disease.      Para.l  :  92.  C.  37.  i6i. 

Fifine,4:415.    C.  720.    222. 

Red  Cott.   5:55,      C.   757. 

105. 

Joch.  6  :  212.     C.  819.    186. 

Disembodied.     Ari.  A.  5  :  100.     C. 

()28.     230. 
Disembogues.     Herv^,  5 :  356.     C. 

816. 
Disembroil.     R,«feB.  3:189.     C. 

48!  I.     49. 
Disemburdening.  Fra  Lippo,  4 :  77. 

C.  343. 
Disemprisonment.       Two    Poets, 

6  :  99.     C.  868. 
Diseneharms.     Epil.   Fer.   6  :  283. 

C.  947. 
Disengaging.     R.  &  B.  3:  74.     C. 

435.     69. 
Disenmesh.    R.  &  B.  3:470.     C. 

599. 
DisenVolved.    Ari.  A.  5 :  100.     C. 

629.     124. 
Disfigure.     R.  &  B.  3 :  33.     C.  427. 
Disfigurement.       Rosny,     6 :  390  ; 

7:4.     C.  987.     215. 
Disgrace.    Sor.  1 :  194.    C.  75.    70. 

R.  &B.3:43.  C.  431.    242. 

R.   &  B.  3:362.     C.  556. 

46. 

J.  Lee,  4: 159.     C.375.    67. 

Two  Poets,  6:77.     C.  859. 

70. 
Disgraces.     Para.   1 :  120.     C.   47. 

181. 
Disguise.     R.   &   B.  3 :  189.      C. 
489.     182. 

Balau.4:297.    C.615.   219. 

Fifine,  4 :  415.     C.  720. 

Inn    A.    5:297.       C.    795. 

Disguise  -  abjuring.      Geo.    B.   D. 

6 :  326.     C.  fK34.     264. 
Disguised.      Inn    A.    5 :  276.      C 

786.     48. 
Disgust.    R.  &  B.  3 :  428.     C.  582. 

174- 
Dishevelment.     R.  &  B.   3:434. 

C.  584.     100. 
Disinfection.    R.&B.  3:276.     C. 

524.     211. 
Disinterestedness.  Colombe,2: 199. 

C.  238.     78. 
Dismissed.     R.   &  B,   3:183.     C. 

487.     12. 
Dispread.     Sor.  1 :  252.     C.  98. 
Dispute.     Para.  1:52.     C.22.    96. 
Para.  1 :  69.     C.  28.     152. 


Dispute.  Ben  Ezra,  4 :  188.    C384. 

291. 
Disqualifies.    R.  &  B.  3:  444.     C. 

.5S9.     268. 
Disregard.     R.    &   B.  3:184.     C. 

4S,S.     67. 
Dissect.     Para.  1 :  105.    C.  42.    54. 
Dissever.       Porph.     2 :  329.        C, 

_28(;. 

Dissertates.     Master  H.  2 :  94.     C. 

I'HJ. 
Disshrouded.    R .  &  B .  3 :  403.     C. 

572.     216. 
Dissociation.      Prince   H.    4:352. 

C.  6!HJ.     43. 
Dissolved.     Joch.  6:  225.     C.  924. 

57- 
Distance.     Red   Cott.     5:5.      C. 

738.  286. 
Distemperature.     R.  &  B.  3:235. 

C.  508.     84. 

Eas.-Dav,  4 :  55.     C.  .3.35. 

Distillerj-.     Red   Cott.  5 :  70.      C. 

7<i2.     55. 
Distilment.     R.   &  B.   3:61.     C. 

438.     103. 
Distinctions.     Red  Cott.  5:6.     C. 

739.  114. 

Distinctlier.     Sor.  1 :  316.     C.  123. 
Distortions.     Straf.  1 :  177.     C.  68. 

109. 
Distrust.    Pillar,  6:269.     C.  941. 

127. 
Disturbed.      Death  in   D.   4:192. 

C.  386.    226. 
Disk-Hke.    Rudel,4:123.    C.  361. 
Divagation.     R.  &  B.  3:232.     C. 

.507.     241. 
Diver.     Para.  1 :  46,     C.  19. 
Dives.     Ned   B.  6:147.      C.   890. 

18. 
Diversely  -  moving.      Prince    H. 

4:341.     C.  686. 
Divided.     Para.  1 :  119.     C.47.    5. 
Divuie.      Fifine,   4:395.      C.   708. 
286. 

Epil.    Melon-S.  6:242.     C. 

930.     267. 
Divinelj'-precious.     Fr.  Fu.  6:  341. 

C.  970. 
Diviner.     Cliris.-Eve,  4:  7.    C.318. 

ISO- 
Divining-rod.     R.  &  B.  3:  25.     C. 

424.     129. 
Divorce-bill.    R.  &  B.  3 :  295.     C. 

531. 
Dizened.     Englishm.  2:262.      C. 

262. 


339 


Djabal 


INDEX 


Double-raced 


Djabal.     Druses,  2 :  98,     C.  197. 
Djereed.     K.  &  B.  3: 11.     C.  419. 
Dmitri.     Iv^n,  (5:  i;J2.     C.  881. 
Do.     liy  Fire.    2 :  59.    C.  185.    66. 

Flight,       2 :  303.       C.    27G. 

176. 

Flight,  2 :  307.   C.278.   285. 

R.    &   B.   3:307.      C.  558. 

215. 
Does.     Death  in  D,  4:193,    C.  380. 

253. 
Doctors.     Red    Cott.    5 :  55.      C 

757.     105. 
Doctored.    R.  «S;B.  3: 105,   C.480. 

267. 
Doctrine.    Death  in  D.  4 :  193.     C. 
380.    253. 

Ber.  de  M,  0:  295.     C.  952. 

17. 
Documents.    R.&B.  3:220,     C. 

504.     79. 
Dog.    R.   &  B.  3:207,     C,  490. 
249. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  312.     C,  538, 

R,   &  B.  3:425,      C.  581. 

2ig. 

J.  Lee,  4 :  159,     C.  375. 

Inn    A,    5:311,      C.    800, 

199- 
Dog-ape.     Ari.  A.  5 :  102.     C.  029. 
Dog -faced.     Ari.  A.  5:102.      C. 

029. 
Dog-fox.     Druses,  2:98.     C."198. 
Dog-Jew,     Fil.   Bald.  5:385.     C. 

826. 
Dog-like.    R.&B. 3: 155.    0.470. 

98. 
Dog-sage.     Pippa,  1 :  351.     C.  138. 
Dog-sleep,    R.  &  B.  3:  7.     C.  417. 

170. 
Dog-snap.     R .  &  B .  3 :  44.     C.  431 . 
Dog-snarling.     Inn  A.  5 :  282.     C. 

789, 
Dogs-ear,    Dev,  6 :  431 ;  7 :  94.     C. 

1003.     229. 
Dogseared.     R.&B.  3:  2.     C.415. 
Dogana-by-the-Bank.    R.  &  B.  3: 

4()0.     C.  594. 
DoUar,     R,&B.  3:445.     C.  589, 

109. 
Dollar's-worth,   Sludge,  4 :  248.   C, 

408. 
Dolphin-hues,      La  S,   6 :  73,      C. 

858. 
Dolt-head.    Pacch.  5:321,    C.  803. 
Dome-spire.     How,  2 :  5.     C.  105. 
Dominate.     Red   Cott.  5:21,     C. 

744.     225. 


Dominating.     Inn    A,   5:288,     C. 

791.     68. 
Dominic.      R.   &   B.   3:146.      C, 

472. 
Domizia,  Lady.    Liu-ia,  2 :  304.    C, 

300. 
Donald.     Don.  6 :  196.     C.  912. 
Done.     Para.  1 :  53.     C.  22.     258. 

Para.  1 :  97.     C.  39.     284. 

R.&B.  3: 180.   C'.489.  251, 

Too  Late,  4 :  179,     C.  381, 

47- 

Red  Cott,  5:92,      C.   111. 

119. 
Done-by.     Agam.  0 :  17.     C.  837. 
Done-with.    R.&B,  3:426,     C. 
.Wl.     215. 

Chris.  Sm.  6:  312,     C,  959, 

22. 
Donkey-show.    Inn  A.  5 :  302.     C. 

790. 
Doom.     Pau.  1 :  14.     C.  7.     76. 

Ari.  A.  5: 100,    C.029,    124, 

Dooms,     Para.  1 :  35.    C.  15,    274, 
Doomed.    Ari,  A,  5:99.     C.  628. 

80. 
Doomsday.    R.   &   B.  3:36.     C, 

428,     8. 
Door,   R.&B.  3: 64.    C.439,    I13. 

R.&B.  3:  454.  C.  593,  232, 

Pietro,  6 :  176,     C.  903.    49, 

Door-bolt.    R.  &   B.  3:104,     C. 

455, 
Door-hinge.     Chris,-Eve,  4:3,     C. 

317. 
Door-pillar.    Sor,  1 :  265.     C.  103. 
Door-siU,    R.&B.  3:  203.    C,  495. 
Dormant.     Inap.  6 :  400 ;  7 :  27.     C. 

991.     181. 
Dorrs.     Para.  1 :  117.     C.  46. 
Doses.    R.  &  B.  3:250,     C.  514. 

187. 
Dotation.      Cenciaja,  5:374,      C. 

823.     90. 
Double.     Marching,  2:2.     C.  103, 
208. 

R.&B. 3: 240.  C.579.  209. 

Chris.-Eve,   4:6.      C.   318. 

82. 
Double-first.    Don.  6: 194.    C.  911. 
Double-dye.     R.&B.  3:86.     C. 

448.     276. 
Double-dyed.     Forgiv.  5 :  366,     C 

820.     100. 
Double-eyed.    Thro' Met.  2 :  6,   C. 

165. 
Double-raced.     Agam.  6 :  45.     C. 

846. 


340 


Double-shotted 


INDEX 


Dream 


Double-shotted.      Sludge,    4:230, 

C.  401. 
Doubly-dyed.     R.  &B.3:2n9.    C. 

533. 
Doubt.    Pau.  1:25.     C.  11.     loi. 

Saul,  2:  56.     C.  183.     143. 

R.&B.3:8.    C.  417.     157. 

P.&B.3:349.    C.  551.   73. 

R.  &B.3:3!)7.    C.  570.    11. 

R.&B.3:426.  C.581.  176. 

R.&B.3:444.  C.  589.  268. 

Bishop   B.   4:9(3.     C.   351. 

266. 

Bishop  B.  4:97.     C.  351. 

73- 

Abt  V.  4: 185.   C.  383.  231. 

Never,  6 :  235.     C.  928.     88. 

PiUar,  6 :  269.    C.  941.    127. 

Fust,  6:377.     C.  983.     46. 

Doubts.    R.  »fe  B.  3: 132.     C.  467. 

139. 

Inn  A.  5:289.    C.  791.   243. 

Doubted.     Epil.  A.  6 :  440  ;  7 :  113. 

C.  1007.    265. 
Doubtful.     R.   &  B.  3:169.     C. 

481.    30. 
Dove-like.    R.   &  B.  3:469.     C. 

598. 
Dove-tail.     R.  &  B.  3:321.     C. 

541 
Down.    Ari.   A.  5:237.     C.  680. 
36. 

Pietro,  6 :  176.  _  C.  903.     49. 

Down-clappmg.     Chris.-Eve,  4:2. 

C.  316. 
Down-squatted.   Englislim.  2 :  262. 

C.  261. 
Down-torn.     Time's  R.  2 :  252.    C. 

258. 
Down-train.     Inn  A.   5:253.     C. 

777. 
Down-trampling.    Two  Poets,  6: 

90.     C.  864. 
Down-treading.      Bad    D.   II.   6: 

396;  7:  19.  _   C.  989.     205. 
Downright-digger.    Fr.  Fu.  6 :  341. 

C.  970. 
Downward-dwelling.      Balau.    4 : 

295.     C.  615. 
Dowry-dues.    R.  &B.3:345.     C. 

550. 
Dowry-suit.     R.  &  B.  3:  100.     C. 

453. 
Dowse.    Fifine,  4:410.     C.  717. 
Dozen-dozen.    Ari.  A.  5 :  128.     C. 

639. 
Drab-clothed.     Chris.  Sra.   6 :  317. 

C.  961.     198. 


Draff.    Red  Cott.  5 :  77.     C.  765. 
Draff-box.    R.   &   B.  3:421.     C. 

579. 
Drag-forth.      Ari.  A.  5:197.     C. 

666. 
Drag-net.     La  S.  6:  68.     C.  8.56. 
Dragnet's.      Sor.   1 :  194.      C.   75. 

189. 
Dragged.    Epil.  Fifine,  4 :  444.    C. 

7;i(j.    254. 

Draggle-tails.     R.&B.3:247,    C. 

512. 
Dragon.     R.  &  B.  3 :  141.     C.  470. 
107. 

La  S.  6 :  64.     C.  854.     179. 

Dragon-crop.     Ari.  A.  5:  233.     C. 

678.     102. 
Dragon-foe.     Para.  1  :  38.     C.  16. 
Dragon-like.     Red  Cott.  5  :  50.  C 

755. 
Dragon-penned.     Childe  R.  2 :  335. 

C.  288. 
Dragonish.     Red  Cott.  5:21.     C. 

744. 
Drain.    R.  &  B.  3  :  162.     C.  479. 
225. 

Doctor,     6:181.      C.     906. 

156. 
Drains-tleep.     Apol.  &   F.  6:292. 

C.  951. 
Drainer.     R.     &    B.     3:348.     C. 

551.     38. 
Drape.     Prol.  A.  6  :  389  ;  7  : 1,     C. 

987. 
Draught.     Two  Poets,  6:95.     C. 

8(;6.   97. 

Doctor,     6  :  181.      C.    906. 

156. 
Drawback.     R.  &  B.  3:217.     C. 

500.     242. 
Dread-lamping-misehief.      Agam. 

6  :  14.     C.  835. 
Dreads.    R.  &  B.  3 :  334.     C.  545. 

14. 
Dream.     Pau.  1 :  24.     C.  11.     47, 

Para.  1  :  47.     C.  20.     254. 

Para.  1  :  68.     C.  28.     197. 

Para.  1  :  121.     C.  48.     187. 

Any  Wife,   2  :  69.     C.  188. 

274. 
Colombe,  2:211.      C.  243. 

219. 
Boy    &    Ang.    2  :  240.     C. 

254.     268. 
R.   &   B.  3 :  344.     C.  550. 

160. 
Eas.-Day,  4:43.     C.  330. 

137. 


341 


Dream 


Dream.  Andrea,  4  :  84.  C.S46.  55. 

Ber.  de  M.  6  :  296.     C  9.-/J. 

124. 
Ger.  de  L.  6  :  3.52.     C.  974. 

Dev.    0  :  4.30  ;    7  :  92.       C. 

urn.    24. 

Dream  -  appearing-.     Agam.   6:15. 

C.  83.1. 
Dream-Cliateau.    Red  Cott.  5:  60. 

C.  761. 
Dream-drunken.     Ari.  A.   5 :  148. 

C.  648. 
Dream-fashion.     Agam.  6  :  16.    C. 

836. 
Dream-figures.     Fifine,  4  :  392.    C. 

707. 
Dream-like.     Colombe,  2  :  204.  C. 

240.    29. 
Dream-pact.     Inn  A.   5 :  307.     C. 

798. 
Dream-resolve.     Inn  A.  5 :  307,  C. 

798. 
Dreams.      Para.     1  :  60.     C.      2.5. 
273. 

Eas.-Day,    4:53.     C.    334. 

159. 

Fifine,  4  :  422.    C.  724.  189. 

Dreamed.     Epil.  A.  6 :  440 ;  7 :  113. 

C.  1007.     208. 
Dreamer.    Red    Cott.    5:50.     C. 

755. 
Dreaming.     Luria,  2  :  404.    C.  316. 

45- 

Ari.  A.  5  :  159.     C.  652.    4. 

Dreaming-drunk.     Inn  A.  5 :  312. 

C.  801. 
Dree.    Old  Piet.  2  :  42.     C.  177. 
Dregs.     Ari.   A.   5:123.     C.   637. 
61. 

Ger.  de  L.  6:  348.     C.  972. 

23- 
Drench.    R.  &  B.  3 :  215.     C.  500. 

159- 
Dreriment.    Ned    B.    6:147.     C. 

890.     257. 
Drew.    J.    Lee,  4:162.     C.    376. 

149. 
Dried-up.    R.   &    B.    3:1.36.     C. 

468. 
Drink.    R.  &  B.  3  :  450.     C.  591. 

97- 
Drink-dimmed.     Fust,  6:369.     C. 

980. 
Di-ink-offerings.     Ari.   A.    5 :  207. 

C.  «]9. 
Drink-sacrifice.    Balau.  4:286.    C. 

611. 


INDEX  Drunkenness 

Ari.  A.  5  :  121.     C.  637. 
R.  «fe    B.  3:12.      G. 


Drinks. 

189. 
Drinking 

419.     5. 
Drinking-booth.     R.  «&:  B.  3  :  170. 

C.  4.S2. 
Drinking-mugs.    Ari.   A.    5  :  135. 

C.  ()4L>. 
Drippings.    Luria,  2:381.    C  307. 

20. 
Drip^iropping.     Red    Cott.   5:93. 

C.  771. 
Drive.     Sludge,    4:226.     C.    399. 

184. 
Driven.    R.  &  B.  3  :  121.     C.  462. 
212. 

Pambo,    6:2:36.      C.    928. 

215. 
Driver's-lash.    Lovers'    Q.  2:31. 

C.  173. 
Droop.    R.  &   B.   3:28.     C.   425. 

77- 
Drops.      Sor.    1  :  315.      C.    123. 
231. 

R.  «fe  B.  3:  29.     C.  426.    4. 

Dropper-off.    R.  &  B.  3  :  420.     C. 

579. 
Dross.     Red  Cott.  5:36.     C.  750. 

161. 
Droug.     Ivkn,  6  : 1.32.     C.  881. 
Drowsed.     Inn  A.  5  :  276.     C.  786. 

233. 
Drowsihead.     Red  Cott.  5:4.     C. 

738. 
Drub.    R.  &   B.  3  :  199.     C.  493. 
58. 

Ari.    A.    5:141.     C.    645. 

125. 
Drudgery.    Joch.  6 :  218.     C.  921. 

292. 
Drug-box.     CUve,  6:157.     C.  894. 
Drugged.    Inn  A.  5 :  276.     C.  786. 

233. 
Druid.    Fifine,  4  :  435.     C.  731. 
Druidic.    Two    Poets,  6:80,     C 

860. 
Drum-accentuation.     Chas.  A.  6: 

355.     C.  975. 
Drunk.    R.  &  B.  3  :  215.     C.  500. 
262. 

Bishop  B.  4 :  108.     C.  356. 

211. 
Dnmkards.     R.  &  B.  3  :  104.     C. 


4.55.     51. 
Drunken.     Inn  A.  5  :  284.     C.  789. 

37- 
Drunkenness.     R.  &  B.  3  :  48,     C. 
433,     103, 
342 


i 


Drysaltery 


indp:x 


Ears 


D,^saUery.    Pied    Piper,    2: 2a5.  I  D„st-handful.      R.   ^   B    3-0,9 
Du^P,-.,     Two    Poets,    6:88.     C.    IWhLkp.    Inn  A.  5: 282.    C  788 


^^^^k-down.    R.  &  B.3:135.     C. 

^^^^-^nder.    Sludge,  4:226.     C. 

Ducks.    R.   &B.  3:3;,.     (7.429. 

205,  '    "" 

^'^^'^Jn^s-down.       Baku.   4:304. 

Due.     R.    &   B.   3:336.      C.   546 

170. 
-Mary  W.   6:206.     C.   916 

J  ue-weight.   Agam.6:15.    C.  836. 

iJuhl      Mul^y.  6:164.     0.897 
Uuke's-crown.     Twr.  P^„<.„   ri^ 


Dust-hole.'   Chm.-Eve",  4':25      C 
31:,).  ■        • 

Dust-speck.    Death  in  D    4-o(>i 

C  .390.  ■  "     • 

Duteous.    F.-imily,  6:248.     C.  932. 

Duty.      Guard.    Ang.   2-89       C 
194.     285.  ■      ■ 

I^t'fl   Cott.   o :  33.     C    740 
126. 
Duties.     Evelyn,   2 :  24.      C    171 

^^^':b.''^^"^''mi]y.  Ari.A.5:125. 


,    ,    **'"cj.  u.  i'>-±.     o.  rt'jy.  t;   sou  *       ^.  >^.wo-^. 

aVS"""-    TwoP.ete,0:ai.    DW,liW-p,,«.     R.   &  g    3.„ 

Dumas.     F:.  &B   3-9      r  di;^  ri''-'*'^"     Ri" 

Dmub-found*.      r;&   g-1jfV9    n?^-    ^-^B.  3:464.     C.  596, 

O.  445.     260.  ■    '■    r»  •      1     ,      ^ 

Dumb-show.     Sor.  1:285      C  111      T-T^^*^'     K.&B.  3:352.     C. 
Dumb  -  stricken.      Flifrht     "J-'our      n   •       j         t, 

C.  274.  ''''^^^^   2  •  -^'^-    ^^°f::?,^y-  Bea.  Sig.  6 :  419 ;  7 :  71 

Dimibness.       Deaf  &   D.   4 :  216.  '  ^^°- 

DnnipleR*  6.3:280.     C.  526    I  -p 

Dung.     R.   &  B.  3:332.     C.  545.  ^ 

Dung-ball.      An.  A.  5:110.      C.  ^201'.     ^^  ^^'''-   -'■^'^''     ^-   1«7. 

Dun^-heap.    La  S.  6: 73.     C.  858   ^^§1?-^^^^.  Ari.   A.  5:1.35.     C 

Dunghill-top.    R.  &  B.  3-  39      r     Fo  1  j  t^ 

430.  "^  ^.  o.dj.     C.    Eage-eyed.  Para.  1:44.     C  19 

Dimgeon-straw.    R.   &  B    3 -on     -^'If/e-ieather.    Memor.2:90.    C 
C.  426  »^   -u.   o.  _.f.        ji),,_  '^• 

Dupe.     Para.  1:66.     C  27      i8t      S^^j^^f^anee.     Para.  1:. 52.     C.22 
Duped.     Ger.  de  L.  6: 344    %  T^/^'t-o""'^-    ^^'^-   ^e  L.  6::}47 

9/1.     67.  ■  1^        "'•^• 

Durability.    Red  Cott.  5:32      r         -^Hf^^^e^-    Red  Cott.  5:8.     C. 

/48.     233.  ■      ^'    TT.  ''y", 

»»"*'y-«S^I>e<l.      Red    Cott.  pfor-    «.  &B.  3:31.     C.  426 

Uug-leavej.'    Fifine,  4,388.    C.    ^I^i^.^'i^f.-^'^-^^;   -f. 

D^t.    1.^*  B.  3:«.     a  582.  L^™„'."r.   ^  3.  3^,3       ^ 

R.   &  B.   3:455      n    w?    ^ir       i    ^3"  ^^ 

144.      •   '*-*^^-     ^-   593.    Ear-shot.     R.«feB.   3:172.      C, 

Toccata,  2:  36.  C  175    260     P  "^''''''"     ?>?°-.     „ 

Ned    B:6:i46        ciS        206.    ^'"•^- S™- 6:  316.     C.  960 

Dust-dry.    Ned  B.  6: 143.     C.  887.  T  24^    ^^^"s.  Sm.  6 :  317.     C.  961 

343 


Earlier 


INDEX 


Earthliest 


CliildeR.2:333,    C.287. 


Red  Cott.  5 :  50. 

5  :  270.      C.   784. 


C.37.     98. 
K.  &  B. 


C.  17. 
C.  129. 
C.  137. 

C.  193. 
;95.     C. 


;325. 

242. 

112. 

160. 

36. 

19(J. 


Earlier 

Early-exercised 

C.  755. 
Earn.     Inn  A. 

242. 
Earned.     Para.  1 :  94. 
Earnest-money-piece. 

3  :  110.     C.  457. 
Earnestness.    Geo.   B.   D.  6 

C.  9G3.     133. 
Earth.     Para.  1 :  40. 
Pippa,  1 :  327. 

Pippa,  1 :  349. 

Before,  2  :  86. 

Master  H.   2 

242. 
R.&B.3:13.    C.419.   179. 

R.  &  B.  3:  98.  C.  453.  107. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  272.     C.  522. 

R,   &  B.  3 :  277.     C.  524. 

281. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  365.    C.  5.^7.  56. 

R.    &  B.   3:388.     C.  566. 

137- 

Chris.-Eve,    4:9 

145- 
Pict.    Ig.  4  :  74. 

274. 

J.  Lee,  4 :  161.    C.  375.  227. 

Gold   H.  4:165.      C.    377. 

20. 

Worst,  4: 170.   0.378.    106. 

Dis  Al.   4:174.         C   379. 

146. 

AbtV.4:183.    C.  382.  106. 

• Ben  Ezra,  4  :  190.     C.  385. 

246. 
• Prol.   Fif.   4:384.     C.  702. 

248. 

Ari.  A.  5:177.    C.659.    57. 

Inn  A.  5:  286.    C.  790.    106. 

Pacch.5:327.    C.  80.5.    127. 

Numph.5:350.   C.  814.  55. 

Epil.  Paceh.  5  :  392.    C.  829. 

270. 
• Prol.  La  S.  6:53 

233. 
Ned    B.  6:147. 

246. 

Pan,  6:188.     C.  909.     172 

Sol.  &  B.  6 :  202.     C.  914 

192. 

Joch.6:232.     C.927.     148 

Fr.   Fu.   6:338.       C.    968 

132. 
• Ger.  de  L.  6 :  348. 

237. 


C.   319. 
C.  342. 


C.  849. 
C.   889. 


C.  972. 


Earth-and-sun.       Ari.   A.   5  :  114. 

C.  634. 
Earth-attire.    Mesmer.  2  :  245.    C. 

256. 
Earth-beds.    La  S.  6  :  58.     C.  851 . 
Earth-blood.    Ari.  A.  5 :  142.     C. 

645. 
Earth-born.    Reph.  6  :  431 ;  7  :  95. 

C.  1004.    56. 
Earth-breath.      Pan,    6 :  190.      C. 

909. 
Earth-bred.       Agam.   6:43.       C. 

846. 
Earth-brood.       La  S.   6:56.      C. 

850.     19. 
Earth-deeps.     La   S.  6 :  74.      C. 

858. 
Earth-felt.     Ber.  de  M.  6 :  300.    C. 

954.     246. 
Earth-flesh.     Ari.   A.  5:114.     C. 

634. 
Earth-product.     Red   Cott.    5  :  50. 

C.  755. 
Earth-shell.     Red  Cott.  5  :  14.     C. 

741.    216. 
Earth-smoke.     Joch.   6 :  219.      C. 

921. 
Earth-space.       Prince   H.   4  :  351 . 

C.  690. 
Earth-spasm.    Ari.  A.  5:143.     C. 

645. 
Earth-thistledown.    Ari.  A.  5 :  120. 

C.  636. 
Earth -tint.      Flight,   2:297.      C. 

274. 
Earth  -  upholding.       Imp.     Aug. 

6:426;  7:85.     C.  1001. 
Earth's.     Para.  1:102.    C.41.    28. 

R.    &   B.   3:378.      C.  662. 

81. 

Bishop  B.  4 :  103.     C.  354. 

17. 

Ben  Ezra,  4 :  190.     C.  385. 

43- 

Ari.  A.  5: 165.     C.654.    46. 

La  S.  6 :  54.     C.  849.     94. 

Apol.  &  F.  6:  291.     C.  950. 

10. 

Chris.  Sm.  6:  313.     C.  959. 

10. 

Specul.   6:394;    7:13.      C. 

989.     138. 

Reph.     6:432;    7:97.      C. 

1004.     211. 

Reph.    6:4.39;    7:111.      C. 

1006.     127. 
Earthliest.    Para.  1 :  91.     C.  36. 


344 


Earthly-awful 


Earthly-awful.    Fifine,  4:403.    C. 

71. S. 
Earthquake.    Sor.  1 :  198.     C.  70. 
34- 

R.   &    B.  3:i;}G.      C.  468, 

247. 
Earthquake-thundering.      Ari.  A. 

5 :  2:33.     C.  (i78. 
Earwig -sophist.     Ari.   A.  5:123. 

C.  038. 
Ease.     Flight,  2:304.     C.  277.     4- 
Ease-deserving.    Geo.  B.  D.  0 :  319. 

C.  9(J1. 
Easily-imagined.     R.  &  B.  3:  325. 

C.  542. 
East-cone.     Joch.  6 :  215.     C.  920. 
Easter-time.     R.  &  B.  3:  111.     C. 

458. 
Easy.     Crist.   &    M.  6:204.      C. 

915.    34- 
Easy-going.    Chas.  A.  6 :  361.     C. 

977. 
Easy-managed.    Agam.  6 :  40.     C. 

845. 
Easy-natured.    Sor.  1:238.     C.92. 
Eat.    Two  Poets,  6: 109.     C.  871. 

286. 
Eaten.    St.  Prax.  4:90.     C.  349. 

157- 
Eating.     R.  &  B.  3:  200.     C.  494. 

105. 
Ebbing.     Ari.  A.  5:238,     C.  680. 

217. 
Ebion.    Death  in  D.  4:198,      C. 

388. 
Eeelin  Romano.     Sor.  1 :  196,     C. 

76. 
Ecello.    Sor.  1 :  199.     C.  77. 
Echo,     In  a  B,  4:138,      C.   366. 
220, 

^—  La  S,  6:  59.     C.  851.     140. 

Eclipse.      La   S.  6:61.      C.    852. 


INDEX  Elevate 

R.  &  B.  3:39i).      C, 
C.   725. 


234. 
Edelweiss.    La  S.  6:58,     C,  851. 

6. 
Eden  -  barrier,      Eas.-Day,    4 :  48. 

C.  333. 
Eden-gate.     R.   &  B.   3:15.       C. 

420.     150. 
Edge.    R.  &  B.  3:253.     C.  515. 
^43. 

R.   &   B.    3:340.      C.   548. 

^275. 

Bishop  B.  4:100.     C.  .353. 

119. 
Edith,    Too  Late,  4:178.     C.  asi. 
Edora's,     Joch.   6:223,      C.  923. 

30. 


Educated 

571.     258. 
Efface.      Fifine,   4 :  425, 

172. 
Effect,     R,  &  B.  3:24.     C.  424, 
202. 

^lu    a    B.   4:14.5.      C.   369. 

MS- 
Effloresced.     RedCott,  5:7.     C. 

7:19. 
Effluent.     Fifine,  4:399.     C,  711. 

69. 
Effort.     Para.  1 :  72.     C.  29.    160, 

Master  H,  2 :  95.      C.  196. 

292. 

R.    &   B,  3:339.      C.   547, 

72. 
Efforts.     In  a  B.  4: 147.     C.  370. 


R.  &  B,  3:185.     C. 
Sor.   1:209.      C.  81. 


259.  . 
Effraction. 

4S8. 
Effrontery. 

191. 
Eggs.    Epil.  Camel-D.  6 :  260.     C. 

937.     228. 
Eglamor.     Sor.  1 :  217.     C.  84. 
Egregious.     R.   &  B,  3:463,     C. 
.596.     129. 
Red  Cott.  5 :  28.     C.  747, 


Egyptian's.     Para.  1 :  90.     C.  36. 
Eidothe^.     Fifine,  4 :  404.     C.  713.   k 
Eighteen.     Red  Cott.   5:20.      C. 

744.     15. 
Eighth  Odyssey.    R.  &  B.  3: 339. 

C.  548. 
Eighty-years-late.     Ari.  A.  5 :  166. 

C.  655. 
Einsiedeln.     Para.  1 :  .30.     C.  13. 
Elaborated.     Red  Cott.  5:  61.     C. 

759.     21. 
Elaphebolion  -  month.      Ari.    A. 
C.  679. 


Elaphion.     Ari.  A.  5 :  113.     C.  633. 
Elbow-deep.     Gondola,  2 :  266.    C. 

2()3. 
Elbow-height.     R.   &  B.  3:408. 

C.  574. 
Elbow  -  propped.      Inn  A.  5 :  275. 

C.  786. 
Elbow-room.     R.  &  B.  3 :  228.     C. 

r>o'i.    130. 

Elder-brotherly.     R.  &  B.  3:40. 

C.  430.     277. 
Elder-hrothership.     R.  &  B.  3 :  75. 

C.  443. 
Eleinents.     Luria,  2 :  374.     C.  304. 

25- 
Elevate.    Para.  1:44.     C.  19.    QO, 

345 


Elf-needled 


INDEX 


Englished 


Elf-needled.    By  Fire.  2:61.     C. 

Elisha.    R.  &  B.  3  :  18.     C.  421. 

77- 
Ellops-fish.     Ari.   A.   5:141.      C. 

645. 
Elm-tops.    Porpli.  2 :  329.     C.  2SG. 

279. 
Else-excessive.    Beau  -  St.  G :  276. 

^  C.  944. 
Else-exempted.     Bean -St.  6:  271. 

C.  942.     66. 
Else-uneonceived.     Ber.  de  M.  6: 

302.     C.  955. 
ELse-unconquered.      Ivkn,   6 :  131. 

C.  881.     186. 
Else-unsaved.    Geo.  B.  D.  6:  321. 

C.  9t)2. 
Elueubrate.    R.  «fe  B.  3:  409.     C. 

574. 
Elude.     Para.  1:109.    C.43.    121. 
Elvire.     Fifine,  4 :  384.     C.  702. 
Emancipated.     Why,   6:388.      C. 

94s.     22. 
Eniballed.    Ari.  A.  5  :  149.    C.  648. 

128. 
Embassage.     Ari.   A.   5 :  104.     C. 

630. 
Embeds.    Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  319.     C. 

961. 
Embosomings.    Red   Cott.    5 :  16. 

C.  742, 
Embrowned.      Epil.    Fif.    4:443. 

C  735.     112. 
Emendating.      Trans,   4 :  57.      C 

336. 
Emerson.     Sludge,  4:  251.    C.  410. 
Emotion.    Saul,  2:58.    (7.184.    12. 

R.  &  B.  3  :  339.    C.  547.   22. 

Empery.     Protus,  2 :  320.     C.  283. 

198. 
Emphasize.    R.  &  B.  3:318.     C. 

540.     61. 
Emptiness.     Bean-St.    6:277.     C. 

944.     74. 
Empty.    Stat.  &  B.  2 :  322.    C.284. 

221. 
Enarming.      Forgiv.    5 :  361.      C 

818. 
Encolure.     Stat.  &  B.  2  :  322.     C. 

284. 
End.     Para.  1 :  45.     C.  19.     59. 

Sor.  1 :  296.     C.  115.     158. 

Crist.  2  :  19.     C.  170.     231. 

Stat.  &  B.  2 :  326,     C,  285, 

54. 

R,&B.3:16.    C.421.   158. 

R.&B.3:37,  C.  429.   274. 


End.    R.&B,3:54.  C.435,    258. 

R.cfeB.3:74.    C.  443.   206. 

R.&B.3:193.  C.491.  232. 

R.  &B.3:214.  C.499.  109. 

R.  &B.3:274.    C.  523.   27. 

R.  &B.3:30.S.   C.536.   158. 

R.&B.3:331.  C.545.  158. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  335.  C.  546.  158. 

R.  &B.3:369.  C.558.  266. 

R.&B.3:385.  C.565.  258. 

R.  &B.3:427.  C.  582.  239. 

R.<feB.3:448.     C.  590.  11. 

In  a    B.    4  :  146.      C.    370. 

220. 
Death  in  D.  4  :  203.     C.  390. 

154. 
Caliban,     4:212.     C.    394. 

178. 
App.  Fail.  4 :  259.     C.  413. 

17- 
Beau -St.    6:274.     C.    943. 

255. 
Chris.  Sm.  6 :  317.     C.  961. 

158. 
Ends.     Para.  1 :  89.     C.  36.     103. 

R.  &B.3:421.   C.  579.  48. 

R.  &B.3:4()7.    C.  597.   84. 


Endears.    Para.  1 :  81.    C  33.   275, 
Fifine,  4  :  396.   C.  709.   200. 


Endeavor.      Waring,   2 :  271.  C 
265.     267. 

R.&B.3:276.  C.524.  275. 

Red  Cott.   5 :  92.      C.  771. 

245- 

Fr.Fu.6:331.   C.  965.  178. 


Endowments.   Crist.  2  :  18.    C.  169. 

164. 
Endurable.    Soul's  Tr.  2  :  359.     C. 

298.     291. 
Endure.     Sor.  1 :  233.    C.  90.    104. 

Italian,  2  :  256.    C.  259.     16. 

Ben  Ezra,  4  :  190.     C.  385. 

191. 
Prince  H.  4 :  372.     C.  698. 


134. 
Endures.     Old  Piet.  2  :  37.    C.  176. 

226. 
Energy.     Para.  1 :  45.    C.  19.    237, 

Para.  1 :  52.     C.  22.     72. 

Para.  1 :  75.     C.  30.     34. 


Energies.     Pau.  1 :  15.     C.  7.     64. 
Engine-mounts.     Sor.  1 :  290.     C. 

113. 
England.     Straf.  1:130.      C.  50. 
120. 

Straf.  1 :  182.     C.  70.    203. 

R.&B.3:477.  0.601.  269. 


Englished.     Clive,  6 :  155.     C.  893. 


34£ 


INDEX  Eviropean-hearted 


Enisled 

Enisled.    F.Fu.e:336.     C.^S.lEr.es.    Epil.  Fe.  6 :  .83^  C.  0.^ 

Eufoyed.    R.&B.3:274.    C*.  523.  1     K'.^^.^°;;^.^,    R.&B.  3:284 

cS:  4 :  121     C  360     126.    ^-^^  ,  ^  34.     O.  11.  .47 

Chris,  bm.  6  :  317.     C.  JOl.    grr^^      K.  &  B.  3  :  107. 


Eniovment.  "  Geo.   B.   D.   6:322. 

C."t«J3.     198.  p  3., 

Enlarged.     Cleon,  4:122.     C.  3bl, 

Enulhtener.   Joeh.6:212.    C.918. 

Enmesh.      Specul.    6:394;    7:13. 

C.  989.     138.  .     .      ..100      c 

Enmuffled.     An.  A.  5:189.     C. 

Enorbed.    Dan.   Bar.  6:305.     C. 

EnoSgh.^Luna,  2:396.     C.  313. 

-Cfcis.-Eve,  4:4.      C.  317. 

.R.Tb.3:305.    C.535    18. 


Errs.     i'au.  1::^.     "^^  ^'^' r^'l-a 
E^or.     K.  &  B.  3:107.     C.  4o6. 

Epil.^Fer.  6  :  283.     C.   947. 

Errors.    Prince  H.  4  :  358.    C.  692. 

Eruption.     R.   &  B.  3:372.     C. 

560.     62.  . 
R.   &  B.  3:436.     C.  086. 

Escape.  T&  B.  3  :  174.     C.  4X3. 

r!^&  B.  3:. 374.     C.  560. 

CaUban,    4:212.     C.    394. 

ApoL&  F.  6  :  292.     C.  951. 

r'&B.  3:  305^-^535    ^1:1  Escobar.'-Master    h.    2:94.  C. 

Enraptured-much.      K.   <K    o.  ^  , ,  „  , 

no.     C.4.|8.     172.  Essays-and  Reviews.     Gold  H-  4: 

Enroughs.     ^o^.  1 .  IJb.     O.  «o.  ^      ^  o-y_  „     „     ,,.  r^ 

Entangled.^  A  Blot,  2:1<1.      ^-  U^^'^-^^tte.    r.   &    B.  3:4bo.  C. 

EnSuxsiasm'.      Chris.-Eve,     4 :  19.    ^^^96.^^^^^     gea.   Sig.  6  :  414  ;  7  : 

EiS|siastic.    Sor.  1 :  280.   C.  109.    ESn.afjrs.'^'BishopB.  4  :  100.    C. 

EiSanee-moming.     Colombe,   2 :  1     ^^>2^.^^^    R.&B.  3:235.     C.  508. 

^.'^^^■^J^c'^Ae;^.  King  C.  1:410.  C. 
Entraps.     An.  A.  o .  2-b.     C.  o<o.  ^^^^      ^g^ 

24°-      ,      ^.        V    1-389      C     Last    R.    2:281.     C.    268. 

Entrusted.     King   V .   1  •  38J.     ^.  \  ^^g 

153.    290.  ^^         o     Eas.-Day,    4:32.     C.  32.. 

t-r-^^-i:^-C.  -•  Etrnrian^^|>-.  ^^44. 
En^^^:    R.&B.3:415.     C.  577.    |ud.     R.^  ,?.  3,^.^  .^  5.o. 


Epbtle-side.  St.  Prax.4:89.  C. 
Ep^het.  Inn  A.  4:  259.  C.  780. 
Ep'?hets.    Luria,2:384.     C.  308. 

Eqn|i^ided.     Fifine,   4:393.      C. 

Equalizing.    Prince  H.  4 :  344.    C. 

eS.    Sa.  1:120.     C.  47.  18: 


Eude,    K.  <^^  V  %r  o  •  ^)      C. 
EulaUa.    boul's    Tr.    i .  cH^'-     ^• 

Euripides.    R.   &  B.  3:395.     C. 

Ari^"  A.    5:241.    C.    681. 

Ber'^'de  M.  6  :  300.     C.  954. 

Europe.  'Druses,  2:127.     C.  209. 

European -hearted.     Waring,    2: 
272.     C.  265. 


347 


Uusebius 


INDEX 


Existence 


Eusebius.    R.   &  B.    3:107.     C. 

45(;.    109. 
Ewthukles.     Ari.    A.    5:99.     C. 

628. 
Eutropius.    R.   &  B.  3:466.     C. 

597.     26. 
Evanish.    Saul,  2  :  54.     C.  182. 
Eve.    R.   &  B.  3:254.     C.  515. 

45- 
Eve-like.    R.  &  B.  3 :  36.     C.  428. 

R.  &  B.  3: 3.'30.  C.  .544.  118. 

Eve.    Straf.  1  :  156.     C.  60.     242. 
R.   &    B.  3:242.     C.  511. 

lOI. 

R.   &   B.  3:272.     C.   523. 

203. 
Eve-star.  Two  Poets,  6 :  80.  C.860. 
Even-blush.     Para.  1  :  29.     C.  13. 
Even-close.    Sor.  1 :  241.     C.  93. 
Even-tide.     Fr.    Fu.    6:341.     C. 

970. 
Evening.     R.   &    B.   3:318.     C. 

540.     59. 
Evening-country.  Too  Late,  4 :  178. 

C.  3.SI. 
Evening-ends.     May  &  D.  4 :  215. 

C.  .395.     87. 
Event.    Artemis,  4:63.      C.   338. 

12. 
Ever-busy.     Para.  1 :  28.     C.  13. 
Ever-craving.     Druses,  2 :  100.     C. 

199.     32. 
Ever-new.     Chas.   A.  6:. 360.      C. 

977.     185. 
Ever  -  passionate.      Luria,   2:371. 

C.  303. 
Ever-renewed.    PiUar,  6 :  268.     C. 

940.     127. 
Ever-springing.      Chris.-Eve,  4 :  8. 

C.  319.     144. 
Ever-wavering.     Pan.  1 :  16.    C.  8. 
Every-day.     R.    &  B.  3: 158.     C. 
477.     156. 

Sun,  6 :  251.     C.  934.    37- 

Evidence.      Abt    V.    4:185.      C. 
383.     72. 

Shah    A.  6:244.      C.   931. 

16. 
Evil.    Sor.   1:255.     C.  99.     136. 

Old    Pict.  2:41.      C.  177. 

95. 

Luria,  2:  386.   C.  309.    257. 

R.  &  B.  3:  397.     C.  570. 

96. 

St.    Prax.    4:91.      C.   349. 

186. 

Pisgah  L  5:341.     C.  810. 

96. 


Evil.     La  S.  6:6.3.     C.  853.    202. 

La  S.  6 :  64.     C.  853.     133. 

La  S.  () :  71.     C.  857.     60. 

.loch.  6 :  222.     C.  923.     244. 

Mihrab,    6 :  253.       C.    935. 

224. 

Fr.   Fu.     6:  339.     C.   969. 

8.    187. 

Rev.    6 :  436  ;    7 :  105.       C. 

1005.     96. 
Evil-destined.    Agara.  6 :  34.      C. 

843. 
Evil-doer.     Ari.   A.   5:169.      C. 

656. 
Evil-meaning.    Agam.  6 :  35.     C 

843. 
EvU's.     Before,   2:86.      C.    194. 
20. 

Ber.  de  M.  6 :  297.     C.  953. 

177. 
Evils.     Para.  1 :  40.     C.  17.     242. 
Evirate.    Ari.  A.  5 :  133.     C.  642. 
Ex-jeweller.    Red  Cott.  5 :  64.     C. 

760. 
Exalt.     Prince  H.  4:372.     C.  698. 
Example.     Luria,  2:  386.     C.  309. 

257- 
Example-sake.     R.  &  B.  3:332. 

C.  545. 
Exceed.      Soul's   Tr.   2:350.      C. 

294.     125. 
Excels.     Gram.   Fun.  2:310.      C. 

279.     183. 
Exeellencj-.     R.  &  B.  3:452.     C. 

592.     265. 
Excogitate.     R.    &    B.   3:84.     C. 
447.     207. 

R.   &   B.   3:281.      C.   526. 

262. 
Excogitation.     Two  Poets,  6 :  84. 

C.  sia.     I. 
Excuse.     Pippa,  1:348.     C.  137. 

147- 

Colombe,  2:199.      C.   238. 

78. 

Doctor,  6: 187.    C.  908.    41. 

Exenterate.     R.&B.  3:187.     C. 

489.     136. 
Exercise.      R.   &   B.   3:387.      C. 

566.     165. 
Exhausted.    Chas.  A.  6 :  357.     C. 

975.     77. 
Exile.    R.  &  B.  3:235.     C.  508. 

58. 
Eximious.    Joch.  6:211.     C.  918, 

122 

Existence.     Pacch.  5:  .328.    C.  806. 
Joeh.6:229.     C.  926.    267. 


348 


I 


Expend 


INDEX 


Expend.    Fifine,  4:402,     C.   712. 

79- 
Experience.    R.  &  B.  3:70.     C. 
442.     41. 

Prince  H,  4:357.     C.  G92. 

53. 

Two  Poets,  G:90.     C.  8G4. 

27. 

EpU.  Two  Cam.  6 :  263.     C. 

938.     107.  _ 
Experimentalize.  Eishop  B.  4 :  108. 

C.  35(5.     211. 
Explain.    Sludge,  4 :  250.     C.  409. 

67. 
Explaining-.    R.  &  B.  3:292.     C. 

530.     117. 
Explodes.     R.  &  B.  3:414.     C. 

518.     105. 
Explore.      EpU.   Shah  A.  G:24G. 
C.  932.     147. 

Apol.  &  F.  6:  291.     C.  951. 

202. 
Explosion.     R.  &  B.   3:417.     C. 

,578.     152. 
Expostulating.      Sor.   1:271.      C. 

105.     258. 
Express.       Pan.     1:23,      C.     10. 
283. 

Fr.    Fu.    G:331.      C.    965. 

178. 
Expresses.       Fifine,     4 :  425.       C. 

725.     10. 
Expurgate.      Bad   D.   II.   G:39G; 

7:19.     C.  990.     179. 
Exquisitest.      Prol.     Fif.    4:395. 

C.  709. 
Extent.    Para.  1:G8.     C.  28.     2. 
Externe.     Fr.Fu.  6:337.     C.  9G8. 

28. 
Extinction.    La  S.  6:  61.     C.  852. 
^234. 
Extinguisher.     Joch.   6 :  215.      C. 

920.     166. 
Extortions.       Ponte     A.    6:410; 

7 :  53.     C.  995.     20. 
Extra-legal.    R.&B.  3:415.     C. 

577. 
Eyass.    A  Blot,  2 :  147.     C.  218. 
Eye.     Para.  1:G8.     C.  28.     i. 

Pippa,  1:341.     C.  134.    3. 

Incident,    2:232.       C.  251. 

80. 

Luria,     2 :  377.       C.     305. 

238. 

R.   &    B.   3:31.      C.   426. 

109. 

R.   <&.    B.    3:36.      C.  428. 

III. 


Eyes 

C,    737, 
C.    738. 


Eye.    Red    Cott.  5:3. 
132. 

Red    Cott.   5:G. 

226. 

Sun,  6:251.     C.  9.34.     241. 

Eye -balled.      Flight,  2:29G.      C. 

273. 
Eye-east.     Inn  A.  5 :  284.     C.  790. 

219. 
Eye-devouring.    Red  Cott.  5 :  34. 

C.  749. 
Eye-edge.     Fifine,  4:400.     C.  711. 
Eye-figured.    R.  &  B.  3:73.     C. 

443. 
Eye-flower.     In  a  B.   4:150.     C. 

371. 
Eye-fringe.     Red  Cott.  5 :  94.     C. 

772. 
Eye-glance.    Red  Cott.  5 :  50.     C. 

755. 
Eye -holes.      Flight,    2:298.      C. 

275.     69. 
Eye-point.      R.    &   B.   3:15.      C. 

420.     51. 
Eye -points.      Fhght,   2:300.      C. 

275. 
Eye-reach.     R.   &   B.  3:172.     C. 

483.     270. 
Eye-sockets'.     How,  2:5.     C.  165. 
Eye-stare.     Don.  G:  197.     C.  912. 
Eye-viewed.     Plot-C.    6:2G().     C. 

940.     221. 
Eye-Avitness.    R.  &  B.  3 :  128.     C. 

4G5. 
Eye-witnesses.   Death  in  D,  4 :  200. 

C.  389. 
Eyes.     Pan.  1:6.     C.  4.     274. 
Childe  R.  2:332.     C.  287. 

222 

Luria',  2 :  382,     C.  307.     29. 

R.    &    B.  3:20.      C.  422. 

237. 
R.   &    B.    3:32.      C.  427. 

290. 
R.   &  B.  3:116.     C.  4(30, 

100. 

R.   &  B.  3:  217.     C.  501. 

163. 
R.  <&    B.  3:383.     C.  564. 

45- 
R.   &  B.  3:417.     C.  578. 

105. 
R.   <fe  B.  3:433,     C.  584. 

28. 
Cluis.-Eve,  4 :  16.     C.  321. 

145- 
Eas.-Day,  4 :  53.      C.    334. 

281. 


349 


Eyes 

Eyes. 


INDEX 

C.  347. 

C.  713. 

C.  638. 

C.  890. 


Andrea,  4 :  85. 

184. 
Fifine,     4 :  402. 

218. 
All.    A.    5:124 

216. 
Ned    B.    G:147 

100. 
Crist.  &  M.  6 :  205.     C.  915. 

73. 
Chris.  Sm.  6 :  317.     C.  961. 

242. 
Geo.  B.  D.  6:  324.     C.  96-3. 

135- 
Ger.  de  L.  6:  345.     C.  971. 

217. 

Fust,  6 :  .368.     C.  980.     24. 

Wliite    W.    6:394;     7:14. 

C.  989.     147. 
Dev.     6:429;     7:90.       C. 

1(X)3.     38. 

Sonuet,  C.  11.     9- 

Sonnet,  C.  11.     250. 

Eyeballed.     Pted  Cott.  5:16.     C. 

742.     279. 
Eyebright.    Sor.  1 :  260.     C.  101. 
Eyesore.    R.  &B.3:434.     C.  584. 

100. 
Ezekiel.    Straf.  1 :  141.     C.  54. 


Fable.     Pted  Cott.  5 :  10.     C.  740. 

263. 
Fable-making.   Sludge,  4 :  226.    C. 

mi.     173. 
Fabulist.    Ber.  de  M.  6 :  297.     C. 

953.     99. 
Face.     Para.  1 :  116.     C.  46.     60. 

Sor.  1 :  213.     C.  182.     149. 

Pippa,  1:331.    C.  130.    166. 

Pippa,  1:334.    C.  131.    228. 

King  V.  1 :  373.     C.  147. 

Pretty  W.   2:77.     C.  190. 

82. 
Gondola,   2 :  264.       C.   262. 

125. 
Gondola,   2:267.       C.  263. 

56. 

FUght,2:299.    C.275.  228. 

Gram.  Fun.  2 :  310.     C.  279. 

8. 
Stat.  &  B.  2:  323.     C.  284. 

150. 
Childe   Pt.  2:333.     C.  287. 

44- 
Luria,2:372.    C.  303.   240. 


Pact 

Face.    Lnria,  2:399.  C.314.    176. 

R.    &   B.   3:32.       C.   427. 

276. 

R.   &   B.   3:33. 


C.  427. 

C.  430. 

C.  459. 

C.  47G. 

C.  479. 

C.  493. 

C.  503. 


R.   &  B.   3:40. 

166. 
R.   &   B.  3:113. 

112. 
R.   &  B.  3:155. 

243. 
R.   &   B.  3:163. 

268. 
R.   &  B.  3:198. 

95- 
R.   &  B.  3:222. 

236. 

Karsh.  4 :  70.    C.  340.    165. 

Andrea,    4  :  S3.       C.    346. 

105- 

Fifine,  4:. 394.    C.  70S.    105. 

Two  Poets,  6 :  112.     C.  8'.  o. 

189. 

Lxion,6:209.     0.917.    205. 

Face-disguise.    Ari.  A.  5 :  118.     C. 

cm. 

Face-perfection.      Inn  A.   5 :  272. 

C.  785. 
Face-shape.       Fifine,   4 :  426.      C. 

720. 
Faces.    Saul,  2:58.     C.  184.     82. 

Epil.  Fer.  6:283.     C.   946. 

75- 
Faced.     R.  &  B.  3:258.     C.  517. 

42. 
Facet.     Bea.  Sig.   6:413;    7:59. 

C  996.     10. 
Facet-flash.     R.  &  B.  3:31.     C. 

426.     289. 
Facette.     Fifine,  4:  .39.3.     C.  707. 
Fact.    R.  &  B.  3 :  11.    C.  419.    75. 

R.  &  R.  3 :  15.     C.  420.     97. 

R.  &  J3.  3 :  16.     C.  421. 

R.&B.3:19.     C.422.    65. 

177. 

R.(tB.3:20.    C'.422.    252. 

R.   &  B.  3:321.     C.  541. 

243- 

R.   &   B.   3:4(K3.      C.  571. 

168. 

R.&B.3:417.    C.578.    18. 

R.   &  B.  3:471.      C.  599. 

251- 

Sludge,  4:  226.   C.  .399.  241, 

Sludge,  4:  2.50.    C.4<:)9.    67. 

Fifine,  4:418.    C.  721.    233. 

Ger.  de  L.  6:  352.    C.  974. 

75. 


350 


Fact's 


INDEX 


Falcon-latiner 


Fact's.    Ari.  A.  5:138.     C.  G43. 

75. 
Facts.    R.&B.3:60.    C.437.   72. 

La  S.  6 :  62.     C.  «53.     94. 

Iiiap.  « :  400 ;  7 :  26.     C.  'J'Jl. 

Factor.    CliVe,  6:158.    C.  894.    89. 
Factor -days.      Clive,  6:158.      C. 

894. 
Faculty.    Inn  A,  5:284.     C.  789. 

245- 

Cenciaja,  5 :  369.     C.  821. 

La  S.  <i :  GO.     C.  852.     85. 

Faculties.     Two  Poets,  6 :  84.     C. 

H(B.     210. 
Fade.     Para.  1 :  45.     C.  19.     59- 
R.   &  B.  3:476.      C.  601. 

159. 
Fades.    Peanut.  6 :  272.     C.  942. 

^59. 

Fust,  6:  382.     C.  986.     259. 

Fail.     Para.  1:41.     C.  18.     86. 

Para.  1 :  50.     C.  21.     77. 

Colombe,   2:227.      C.  249. 

29. 

Luria,  2 :  376.     C.  305.    6. 

R.   &  B.  3:140.     C.  470. 

219. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  229.     C.  505. 

Andrea,  4 :  84.     C.  34(i.     55. 

Failed.    Luria,  2:  362.   0.299.    87. 

Liu  A.  5:  285.    C.  790.    109. 

Failer.     Epil.  Fer.  6 :  283.     C.  946. 

19. 
FaUure.    R.  &  B.  3 :  277.     C.  525. 

96. 
R.   &  B.  3:438.     C.  586. 

244. 

Cleon,4:121.    CM).    197. 

J.Lee,  4:159.     C.  375.    67. 

Apol.  &  F.  6 :  292.     C.  951. 

245. 
Fain.     One  Word,  4 :  125.     C.  362. 

179.    287. 
Faint-blue.    Sor.  1 :  268.     C  104. 
Faint-colored.     Pau.  1 :14.     C  7. 
Faint-designed.     Sor.   1 :  213.     C 

82. 
Faint-rewarding.    Ari.  A.  5 :  170. 

c.  (;.-.( i. 

Fainting-fits.    R.  &B.3:459.     C. 

594. 
Faintness.     R.   &  B.   3  :  217.     C. 

.501.     163. 
Fair-and-good.       Ari.   A.    5 :  139. 

C.  644. 
Fair-colored.    Sun,  6  :  251.    C.  934. 

241. 


Fair-flowing.     Balau.  4 :  294.     C. 

614. 
Fair-formed.      Agam.   6 :  15.      C. 

s:56. 
Fair-ful.     Fifine,  4  :  442.     C.  735. 
Fairer.     R.&B.  3:387.     C.  566. 

165. 
Fairy-cupped.     By  Fire.  2  :  61.    C. 

i«r). 

Fairy-land.     Para.   1:60.     C.   25. 

273. 
Fairy-mortal.       Flute-M.   6 :  421 ; 

7  :  74.     C.  999. 
Fairy-tale.     Nat.  Mag.  5  :  346.     C. 

S12.     78. 
Fairy-work.      Eagle,   6:240.      C. 

929. 
Faith.    Saul,  2 :  56.     C.  183.     54. 

Luria.  2  :  4U2.    C.  315.    136. 

R.    &  B.   3:79.       C.   445. 

260. 
R.   &   B.  3:379.     C.  562. 

200. 
R.  &   B.   3:416.      C.  577. 

32. 
R.   &  B.  3:456.     C.  593. 

144. 
Chris.-Eve,  4:26.     C.  325. 

38. 

Eas.-Day,  4 :  39.     C.  .329. 

Bishop  B.  4: 107.     C.  355. 

56.' 
In   a   B.   4:143.       C.   368. 


Gold    H.  4:169.      C.  378. 

177. 
Red  Cott.  5:70.      C.  762. 

55- 

Ari.  A.  5: 159.     C.652.    85. 

Ari.  A.  5: 162.     C.6.53.    96. 

Ixion,  6 :  210.    C.  917.    147. 

Cherries,   6:264.      C.   939. 

176. 
Rev.   6  :  4-39  ;    7  :  111.       C. 

1006.     192. 
Faith-defence.      Red  Cott.   5:27. 

C.  746.     56. 
Faiths.    R.  &  B.  3  :  446.     C.  589. 

79- 
Cluis.-Eve,  4  :  27.     C.  325. 


Faithful.    R.  &  B.  3 :  380.     C.  563. 

12. 
Falcon.     A  Blot,  2 :  145.     C.  217. 

68. 
Falcon-gentle.     R.   &   B.   3:158. 

C.  477. 
Falcon-lanner.     Flight,  2 :  291.    C. 
1     271. 
351 


Pall 


INDEX 

C.  192. 
C.   229. 


Fall.    Life  in  L.  2:81 

129. 
A  Blot,  2:175. 

281. 

J.  Lee,4:lG4.  C.376.    201. 

Inn   A.    5  :  252.       C.   777, 

98. 

Ixion,6:210,     C.917.    243. 

Fallen.     Dan.  Bar.  6 :  310.    C.  958. 

119. 
Falling-sickness.    R.  &  B.  3 :  361. 

C.  556. 
False.    Para.  1:118.     C.47.    152. 
Woman's,    2:22.      C.    171. 

261. 
R.   &  B.  3:263.     C.  519. 

140. 
R.   &   B.  3:308.     C.  536. 

277. 
R.   &  B.  3:328.     C.  543. 

121. 
R.   &  B.  3:332.      C.  545. 

78. 
R.   &  B.  3:469.     C.  598. 

73. 
R.   &  B.  3 :  471.      C.  599. 

242. 
R.   &   B.   3:477.     C.  601. 

112. 
Chris.-Eve,  4:6.      C.  318. 

259. 

Fifiue,  4  :  408.    C.  715.    283. 

Fifine,  4 :  410.     C.  717.     63. 

Fifine,  4:  421.    C.  723.    137. 

Red   Cott.   5:15.      C.  742. 

241. 
Red   Cott.   5:21.      C.  744. 

100. 
Dan.  Bar.  6 :  310.     C.  958. 


R.   &  B.   3:342. 
44.      C. 


147- 
False-refined. 
C.  549.     28. 
Falsehood.     Old   Pict 

178.     261. 
Colombe,   2:228.      C.   250. 

144. 

—  Soul's  Tr.  2 :  354.     C.  296. 

Fifine,  4:439.    C.733.    263. 

Ari.   A.   5:100.        C.    629. 

263. 
Inn    A.    5:295,       C.    794, 

269. 
Numph.    5:350.       C.    814. 

264, 

Joch,  6 :  226,     C.  924.     265. 

Fust,  6 :  382.     C.  986.     196, 

Falseness,    La  S.  6:59,     C.  851, 
275. 


Fancy-flight 

C.  209, 
C. 


Falsely.     Druses,  2 :  126. 

281. 
Falsish.      Red    Cott,     5:35, 

749.     74. 
Fame.     R.  &  B.  3 :  48.    C,  433.  91 , 

R.   &  B.  3:280.     C.  526. 

284. 

R.   &  B.  3:472.     C,  599, 

175. 

Fifine,  4:  386,    C,  704,    194. 

Fame's.    Two    Poets,    6:89.     C. 

864.     259. 
Family-feast.     R.  &  B,  3:  26,     C. 


R.  &  B.  3:74.     C. 
&    B,    3:90. 


425. 
Family-feel. 

443.     205. 
Family-friend.     R. 

C'._450. 
Family-representative.     R.    &   B. 

3:40.    C  4;;o.    277. 

Family-tree.    R.  &B.  3:48.     C. 

433.    82. 
Families.    Fifine,  4 :  397.     C.  709. 

282. 
Famine-fraught.    Agam.6:8.     C. 

833 
Famo'usest.    Sor.  1 :  269.     C.  105. 
Fan  -  branches.     Saul,   2 :  52.      C. 

182. 
Fan-fruit,    Ber.  de  M.  6  :  301.     C. 

954. 
Fan-rnounts.    R.  &  B.  3: 196.     C. 

492. 
Fan-trees.    Para.  1 :  112.     C.  45. 
Fancy.    Miscon.    2:73,      C.    189, 

143. 
Bishop  B,  4:93,     C,  350. 

197- 

Fifine,  4 :  403.     C.  713.    3 1 . 

Ari.  A.  5:  120.     C.937.    76. 

Fr.  Fu.  6:  330.     C.  965. 

Fr.    Fu.    6:334.      C.    967. 

162. 

Flute-M.  6 :  422  ;  7 :  76.     C. 

1000.     266. 
Fancy-and-flesh.    R.  &  B.  3: 126. 

C.  464. 
Fancy-dice.      Pietro,    6:180,      C. 

905. 
Fancy-fact.    Red  Cott.  5 :  35.     C. 

749. 
Fancy-fevered.    R.   &  B.   3:205. 

C.  496. 
Fancy-fit.     R.&B.3:20.     C.  422. 
Fancy-fleerings.    Ari.    A.    5 :  173. 

C.  657. 
Fancy-flight.    Ari.  A.  5 :  165.     C. 

654.     185, 

352 


Fancy-fling 


Fancy-fling.    Ari.  A.   5 :  135 

642. 
Fancy-freak.    R.  &B.  3:59.     C. 
4.S7. 

Prol.    Fer.  6 :  240.     C.  929. 

99. 
Fancy-free.     Para.   1:44.     C.   19. 

141. 
Fancy-haze.   Prol.  A.  6:  390  ;  7:  2. 

C.  987.     264. 
Fancy-land.     Red  Cott.  5 :  24.     C. 

745, 
Fancy-scrawls.     Karsh.  4 :  66.    C. 

339. 
Fancy-shape.       Bea.   Sig.   6:412; 

7:  57.     C.  990.     51. 
Fancy-spinmng.     Flute-M.  6 :  421 ; 

7:75.     C.  1000.     71. 
Fancy's.     Dev.  6:4:30;  7:92.     C. 

1003.     71. 
Fancying.      Sludge,      4:226.      C. 

399. 
Fano.     Guard.  Ang.  2 :  89.    C.  194. 
Far.     Childe   R.   2:335,     C.  288. 

62, 
Far-away.    Sor.  1 :  295,     C.  115. 
Far-flashing.     Pau.  1:9.     C,  5, 
Far-flyer.     Chas.   A.   6:355.      C. 

975.     159. 
Far-looking.      Para.     1:61.       C. 

25. 
Far-reaching.     Glove,    2:249.     C. 

257. 
Far-ofF.    Pippa,    1:350.     C.  138. 

120. 
Far-over-fifty.     R.    &    B,    3:72. 

C  442. 
Far-seeing,     Para.  1 :  62.     C.  26. 
Far-shooting.     Ari.  A.  5:192.     C. 

665, 
Fai-sought.    Pan,  6  :  190.     C.  909. 
Fardel.     R.  &  B.  3  :  58.     C.  437. 
FareweU.      R.   &   B.    3:276.     C. 
524.     214. 

R.   &    B.  3:325.     C.  542. 

196. 
Farinaeci.     R.   &  B,  3:286.     C. 

528. 
Farthest  -  reaching.    Joch.  6  :  223. 

C.  923.     258. 
Fashioned.     Para.  1 :  119.     C.  47. 

95- 
Fast-falling.     R.  &  B.  3  :  264,     C. 

519. 
Fast-fixed.    Epil,    Pacch.    5:391. 

C.  828. 
Fast-returning.    Chris.  Sm.  6  :  316. 

C,  960. 


INDEX 

C. 


Favorite 


Fast-slipping.   Sor,  1 :  310,    C  121. 
Fast-thickening,     Pan,  6  :  188.    C. 

909. 
Fat-fry.     Ari.  A.  5:141.     C.  64.5, 
Fatal-clear.     Para.  1 :  52.     C.  22. 
Fate.     Pau.  1:17.     0.8.     141. 

Sor.  1 :  323.     C.  126.     138. 

R.   &    B.    3:69.     C.  441. 

82. 
R.   «fe  B.   3:342.     C,  549. 

132. 
R.   &   B.   3:371.     C.  559, 

198. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  375.     C.  524. 

Cleon,  4  :  121.     C.  361.     47. 

Sludge,    4:251,       C.     410, 

265. 

La  S.  6 :  61.     C.  852,     109. 

Fates.     Chris.  Sm.  6  :  318.     C.  961. 

7- 
Fatemite.      Druses,     2 :  133,      C. 

212, 
Father,     R.  &  B.  3 :  420,     C,  579, 

73- 
Father's.      Colombe,    2:184.      C. 

232.     24. 
Fatherhood,     R.  &  B.  3:  281,     C. 

526.     19. 
Fathom -deep.     R.   &  B.  3:315. 

C.  539.     117. 
Bean -St.   6:275.      C.   943. 

Fault.     Para.  1 :  97.     C.  39.     194. 

Straf .  1 :  191.     C.  74.    52. 

R.  &    B.    3:59,      C.  437. 

215. 
R.   &   B.  3:188.     C.  489. 

163. 
R.   &  B.  3:271.     C,  522. 

114. 
R.   &  B,  3:424,     C,  581. 

163. 
Andrea,     4 :  85.      C.    346. 

56. 
Fr.    Fu.    6:328.      C.    965. 

96. 
Faidt-free.     Ari.  A.  5:204.      C. 


Karsh,       4  :  68. 
Ari.  A,  5:136, 


(i68. 
Faultier, 

340. 
Faultiness 

643.     199. 
FaiUty.     Old  Piet.  2:40.     C.  177. 

184. 
Two  Poets,  6:  SK3.     C.  866. 

37- 
Favorite.    Pippa,  1:341.     C.  134. 


353 


Pa-wn-foot 


Fawn-foot.     Ari.  A.  5:112. 

U33. 
Fawn  -  skin.     Epil.  Eagle,  6 :  241. 

C.  9:30. 
Fawn-skin -dappled.      Pretty  W. 

2 :  77.     C.  1«). 
Fawn-step.      Lin  A.   5:  314.      C. 

■SOI,     105. 
Fear.    Pau.  1:2.5.     C.  11.     loi. 

Para.  1:02.     C.  26.     in. 

Pippa,     1:335.       C.      132. 

260. 

King  V.  1 :  .373.     C.  147. 

Druses,    2:122.       C.    207. 

289. 
Colombe,  2:195. 

143. 
Gondola,   2 :  266. 

47-     ^ 
R.    &  B.   3:206. 

25. 
Prol.  Fif.   4:382. 

75-  . 
Inn    A.    5:209. 

lOI. 

Two  Poets,  6: 112 


INDEX 
C. 


Fellow-fighter 


C.  237. 

C.  263. 

C.  4<t6. 

C.  701. 

C.  784. 

C.  873. 

C.  877. 

C.  897. 

C.  931. 


Mar.  Rel.  6:124 

40. 
CUve,    6  :  163. 

40. 
Shah    A.   6:243. 

236. 
Apol.  &  F.  6 :  292.     C.  951. 

4. 
Fear-free.     Agara.  6:27.     C.  840. 
Fear-sprinkle.     Inn  A.  5 :  279.     C. 

7!S7.     146. 
Feared.     Colombe,  2 :  206.    C.  241. 

no. 
Ft.    &    B.   3:53.      C.   4.35. 

253. 
Aljt    V.    4:184.      C.   383. 

95- 
Feast.    R.  &  B.  3:40.      C.  432. 

279. 
Feast-master's.     Popul.  2 :  90.     C. 

195. 
Feast -night's.      Sor.   1:266.      C. 

103. 
Feast-time.    Prince  H.  4 :  369.     C. 

097. 
Feat.    Para.  1:30.     C.  1.3.     251. 

La  S.  0:  54.     C.  849.     185. 

Feather-bed.      Red   Cott.   5:28. 

C.  746.     253. 
Feather-fluff.     Bad  D.  IV.  6 :  399 ; 

7:24.     C.  990. 


Feather-headed.     Ari.  A.  5 :  153. 

C.  6i;». 

Feather-phantom.     Inn  A.  5 :  286. 

C.  79(J. 
Feather-seed.     Touch,  6:191.     C. 

910. 
Feather -thick.     Bean-St.   0:270. 

C.  944. 
Feather-tufts.     Chris.  Sm.  0:316. 

C.  iWO. 
Feather-weight.    R.   &   B.   3:90, 

C.  449. 
Feathered.      Geo.    B.    D.   6:320. 

C.  901.     167. 
Features.     Soul's  Tr.   2:338.     C. 

289.    41. 
Febricity.     Red  Cott.  5:00.     C. 

759. 
Fed.      Sludge,    4:237.      C.    404. 

218. 
Fee.      R.  &    B.  3:27.      C.  425. 

287. 
Feeding.    R.&B.3:351.     C.  552. 

280. 
Feel.    Soul's  Tr.  2:346.     C.  293. 
28. 

R.   &   B.   3:276.     C.  524. 

68. 
R.   &  B.   3:435.     C.  585. 

144. 

Chas.  A.  6:358.      C.  970. 

169. 
Feign.    R.  &  B.  3:421.     C.  579. 
73- 

R.  &  B.    3:442.     C.  588. 

80. 
Feigning.     R.   &  B.   3:259.      C. 

.517.     136. 
Felice  -  church  -  side.      R.    &   B. 

3:12.     C.419. 
Fell.     R.    &    B.   3:15.       C.   420. 
54- 

Bean-St.  0:277.     C.  944. 

135. 
Fell-to.     Fifine,  4:  424.     C.  725. 
FeUow.     Evelyn,  2:24.      C.   171. 
171. 

Luria,2:381.    C.  307.    179. 

Fellow -Canon.     R.  &  B.   3:200. 

C.  520. 
Fellow-cheat.    Inn  A.  5 :  294.     C. 

794.     58. 
Fellow-craftsman's.   Luria,  2:381. 

C.  307. 
Fellow-creature.    La  S.  6 :  66.     C. 

854.     286. 
FeUow- fighter.      Ari.  A.  5:139. 
C.  044. 


354 


I 


Fellow-flock 


INDEX 


Fiesole 


Fellow-flock.     Bishop  B.  4:111. 

C.  357. 
Fellow-hope.    Sor.  1 :  ItX).     C.  TC. 
Fellow-men.    Eas.-Day,  4 :  50.    C. 
3X3.     20I. 

Iv^n,  G :  140.     C.  SSf).    276. 

Fellow-mortals.     Bean-St.  0:'J7tJ. 

C.  1)44.     67. 
FeUow-orb.     Fifine,  4:390.      C. 

705. 
Fellow-simier's.    Red  Cott.  5 :  58. 

C.  758. 
Fellow-sleep-time.     Agam.  6:20. 

C.  840. 
Fellowship.      Worst,   4 : 


379. 
Felon. 

123. 
Felt. 


171.      C. 
291. 
R.  &  B.  3:3<30.     C.  555. 


Sor.  1 :  291.     C.  113.     54. 

Crist.  2 :  19.     C.  170.     234. 

R.  &  B.  3:182.     C.  487. 

93- 

Two  Poets,  6 :  90.     C.  864. 

27. 
Feltons.    Straf.  1 :  134.     C.  51. 
Female-babe.    R.  &B.  3:58.     C. 

437. 
Female-child. 


Axi.A.5:118.     C. 


635. 


Female-gamitnre.  Red  Cott.  5 :  41. 

C.  751. 
Female-  Playhouse  -  seat  -  Preoccu- 

pants.     Ari.  A.  5 :  164.     C.  654. 
Female-song.      Agam.   6:19.      C. 

837. 
Female-stranger.  Agam.  6 :  28.  C. 

841. 
Feminity.     R.  &  B.  3:326.     C. 

543.     30. 
Fen-fire.     Bean -St.  6:282.     C. 

946. 
Fencing-play.     Two  Poets,  6 :  9G. 

C.  866. 
F^nelon.     R.  &  B.  3 :  459.     C.  594. 
Fennel.     Phei.  (J :  127.     C.  879. 
Feimel-field.    Phei.  6:  128.    C.  879. 
Ferdinand,  The  Great-Duke.  Stat. 
«&  B.  2  :  322.     C.  2.S4. 

R.  &  B .  3 :  194.     C.  491 . 

Ferishtah.     Eagle,  6 :  240.    C.  929. 
Fern.    Sor.  1 :  216.     C.  84.     23. 
Fern-seed.    Sor.  1 :  209.     C.  81. 
Fernshaw.    Flight,  2 :  299.    C.275. 
Feniey.       La  S.   6 :  74,      C   858. 

281. 
Ferrel.     How  it  S.  4:58.     C.  336. 
Ferri,  Ciro.    R,  &  B.  3:153.     C. 

475, 


Ferri,    Giro.    R.&B.  3:322.     C. 

541. 
Fescue.     Pacch.  5:323.     C.  804. 
Festa-day.     By  Fire.  2:  61.  C,  186. 
Festus.     Para.  1 :  2!).     C.  13. 
Fetlock-bones.    Ned  B.  6:  149.    C. 

iSlll. 
Fetlock-high.    Sor.  1:197.     C.  76. 
Fettered.    Para.  1:56.    C.  23.    21. 

R.   &   B.   3:300.      C.  533, 

130. 

R.ctB.3:331.    C.544.    83, 

Andrea,  4:84,    C,34<}.    85. 


Fever.    R.  &  B,  3:137.     C.  469. 

53- 
Fever-fit.      R.    &   B.   3:311.      C. 

537. 
Fever-fret.      Bad   D,   II.   6:395; 

7 :  17.     C.  989.     104. 
Fever-stroke.    R.&B.  3:  361,    C. 

556. 
Few.     R.   &   B.   3:21.      C.   423. 

269. 
Fickle.    Two  Poets,  6:  89.    C.863. 

75- 
Fiction.    R.&B.  3:16.     C.  421. 
Fiddle-Show.    Red  Cott.  5:  7.    C, 

739. 
Fiddle-fugues.   Sludge,  4 :  250.    C, 

409. 
Fiddle-pin's.    R.&B.  3:38.     C. 

429.     93. 
Fiddles.    Red  Cott.  5 :  .30.     C.  747. 

52. 
Fiddlepin's.      Two   Poets,   6 :  110. 

C.  872. 
Fief-speech.     King  V.  1 :  373.     C. 

147. 
Field.    R.  &  B.  3:245.     C.  512. 

183. 
Field-buds.    Sor.  1 :  254.     C  98, 
Field-mate.    Ber.  de  M.  6 :  298.    C, 

953.     249. 
Field-path.     Sor.  1 :  241.     C.  93. 
Fieldflower  -  foolishness.      Inn  A. 

5 :  259.     C.  780. 
Fiend.     Pau.  1:2.     C.  2.     228. 
Fiend  -  voices.      Prospiee,    4 :  216, 

C.  395. 
Fiend's.      Childe  R.   2:  a33.      C. 

288.     14. 
Fiends.     P.ira.  1:80.     C.  32.    142. 

Forgiv.  5 :  367.   C.  820.  114. 

Fiennes.    Straf.  1 :  136.     C.  52. 
FierceUer.     Inn  A.  5 :  279.     C  787. 
Fiery-fine.     Red  Cott,   5:35,     C. 

749.     199. 
Fiesole.    R.  &  B.  3: 194.     C.  491. 


355 


Fife-shriek 


INDEX 


Fife-shriek.    Chas.  A.  6:  355.     C. 

ItTo. 
Fifty-part.      Flight,    2 :  296.      C. 

274. 
Fifty-score.     Marching,  2:2.     C. 

163. 
Fifty-years-old.       Inn   A.  5 :  267. 

C.  783. 
Fig-pecker.    R.  &  B.  3:255.     C. 

516. 
Fig-plaster.     Mihrab,  6:256.     C. 

936. 
Fig-skins.    Fra  Lippo,  4 :  76.     C. 

343 
Fight.    Childe  R.  2 :  333.     C.  287. 
22g. 

Luria,  2 :  385.     C.  308.     13. 

Bishop  B.  4:107.     C.  355. 

287. 

Prince   H.  4:372.     C.  698. 

208. 

Epil.  A.  4 :  440 ;  7 :  114.     C. 

1007.     243. 
Fight-fellowship.    An.  A.  5 :  216. 

C.  672. 
Fight-mark.    A  Blot,  2:156.     C. 

221. 
Fight-word.     Druses,   2:133.     C. 

212. 
Fighting.      Colombe,  2:206.      C. 

241.     no. 
Fighting-cock-fashion.     R.   &   B. 

3:430.     C  583.     183. 
Fighting-face.  Hal.  6:  130.  C.  880. 
Fighting-hack.     Luria,  2:  390.    C. 

310. 
Fighting-man.       King  V.   1 :  389. 

C.  153. 
Fighting  -  people.      Luria,    2 :  364. 

C.  300. 
Fighting-place.     R.   &   B.  3:381. 

C.  563.     131. 
Figtree-roots.     R.  &B.  3:1.     C. 

414. 
Figtree-stump.     Red   Cott.   5 :  25. 

C.  74(i. 
Figure.    Sor.  1 :  199.     C.  77.     173. 

King    V.    1:372.     C.   146. 

126. 
Figure-head.    Ari.  A.  5:173.     C. 

658. 
Figure-piece.    Ger.  de  L.  6:344. 

C.  971. 
Filamot.    Sor.  1:2.31.     C.  90. 
Fillet-folds.     Ger.  de    L.    6:350. 

C.  973. 
FiUip.    R.  &  B.  3:171.     C.  482. 

40. 


Finger-tip 

Chris.    Sm.    6:314. 


Film-flake 

C.  960. 

Film-free.  Pan,  6: 188.  C.  909. 
Film-stuff.  Fust,  6 :  .379.  C.  984 
Film-wings.  Joch.  (i :  226.  C.  924 
Fihu-woik.  Geo.  B.  D.  6:325 
C.  9()3.  133. 
Fr.Fu.  6:341.     C.  970 


Films.    R.  &  B.  3  :  470.     C.  598. 

75. 
Filth.    R.   &    B.  3:84.     C.  447. 

199. 
Filth-heap.    R.   &   B.  3:45.     C. 

432. 
FUth-speck.     Sludge,    4:238,     C. 

404. 
Filthy.     Chris. -Eve,    4:16.      C. 

321.     213. 
Fin-fashion.     Fifine,     4:410,      C. 

717. 
Find.     Colombe,   2:195.     C.   237. 

M3. 

Gram.  Fun.  2 :  312.     C.  280. 

218. 

— Pippa,  2:341.    C.  134.    141. 

Fine  -  lady  -  breeding.    Inn  A.   5 : 

257.     C.  779. 
Fine-pearled.    Flute-M.  6 :  420  ;  7 : 

73.  _   C.  999. 
Finelier.    Soul's    Tr.    2 :  355.     C 

297. 
Finelier-tempered.    Sludge,  4 :  245. 

C.  407. 
Finger.     Soul's    Tr.    2:348.      C. 
293.     255. 

Luria,  2 :  364.     C.  300.    56. 

R.    &    B.    3:20.     C.  422. 

261. 

Abt    V.    4:184.      C.    383. 

93. 

Prince  H.  4 :  350.     C.  689. 

249. 

Geo.  B.  D.  6:  324.     C.  963. 

42. 
Finger-ends.     R.&B.  3:384.     C. 

.564.     20. 
Finger-joint.    R.  &  B.  3 :  416.     C. 

.577.     97- 
Finger-mark.     Fr.Fu.  6:330.     C. 

965.     154. 
Finger-nail.     R.  &  B.  3:175.     C. 

484.     171. 
Finger-stretch.     R.   &  B.   3:189. 

C.  489. 
Finger-tip.    R.  &  B.  3:296.     C. 
5.32.     130. 

Red    Cott.   5:65.     C.  761. 

68. 


356 


Finger-tip 


Fr.   Fu.  6:  339. 


Fingeivtip 

901). 

Finger-tips.    Lovers' Q.  2:  28.     C. 
173.    290. 

J.  Lee,  4 :  1G2.     C.  375.    97. 

Finger-touching.     Lin    A.   5 :  25(J. 

a  778. 
Finger-wise.     E.&B.  3:103.     C. 

455. 
Fingered-o'er.     Prince  H.  4:351. 

C.  (i!tO. 
Finicking.    Red    Cott.    5:7.     C. 

7o!t. 
Fining-pot.    Pillar,  6:268.    C.940. 

.58- 
Finished.     Ben  Ezra,  4:  186.     C 

383.     56. 
Finite.     Ber.   de    M.    6:298.     C. 

953.     154. 
Fir-boles.    Ger.  de  L.  6 :  347.     C. 

972. 
Fir-fringe.     Don.  6: 195.     C.  912. 
Fir-tree-spire.     Sor.  1 :  219.    C.  85. 
Firdausis.     Mihiab,    6:253.      C. 

935. 
Fire.    Para.  1 :  113.     C.  45.    20. 

Druses,  2 :  119.    C.  206.    47. 

A    Blot,    2:163.     C.    224. 

236. 
Time's  R.  2 :  252.     C.  258. 

52- 
Childe  R.  2:333.     C.  287. 

35- 
R.   &    B.  3:175.     C.  484. 

211. 
R.   &  B.  3:206.     C.    496. 

136. 
R.   &  B.  3:276.     C.    524. 

214. 
R.   &    B.  3:295.     C.  531. 

207. 
R.   &   B.    3:426.     C.   581. 

81. 
Fra   Lippo,  4 :  78.     C.  344. 

232. 
Bishop  B.  4: 104.     C.  354. 

244. 
Ari.    A.    5:113.       C.    633. 

69. 

Sun,  6 :  252.     C.  934.     58. 

Caniel-D.    6:259.     C.  937. 

280. 
Fire-ashes.     Ben  Ezra,  4 :  188.     C. 

;>S4. 

Fire-ball-like.    Prince   H.   4 :  375. 

C.  ()99. 
Fire-balls.    Clive,  6 :  162.     C.  896. 

174. 


INDEX 


Firm-rooted 

Agam.    6:19.      C. 


Fire-bearers 

837. 
Fire-clothed.    Prol.   A.   6:  390;  7: 

2.     C.  9)57. 
Fire-dew.     Eas.  -  Day,    4 :  52.     C. 

3:34.     269. 
Fire-drop.      R.    &  B.   3:61.      C. 

438. 
Fire -eye.      Caliban,   4:208.      C. 

;!92. 
Fire-flake.     Ivkn,  6  :  140.     C.  885. 
Fire-flames.     Crist.  2 :  18.     C.  169. 

6. 
Fire -flash.      Mul^y.   6:165.      C. 

898. 
Fire -frame.      Fifine,  4:390.      C. 

705. 
Fire  -  glow.      Two  Poets,  6 :  109. 

C.  872. 
Fire-iions.     R.   &  B.  3:3.     C. 

415. 
Fire  -  la  bar  um.     Para.   1:52.     C. 

22. 
Fire-like.     R.   &  B.  3:175.      C. 

484.     211. 
Fire-new.    SoUl.  2 :  12.     C.  167. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  412.     C.  576. 

Fire-orb.    Apol.  &  F.  6 :  288.     C. 

949. 
Fire-point.    R.  &  B.  3:215.     C. 

500. 
Fire-seeds.    Joch.  6:222.     C.  922. 
Fire  -  smoke.     Agam.  6 :  16.      C 

Fire-sparkle.     Inn  A.  5 :  253.     C 

777. 
Fire-stufe.     Agam.  6 :  12.     C.  834. 
Fire-suffused.     Chris.  ISm.  6:314. 

C.  960.     264. 
Fire-tmted.    A   Blot,   2:154.     C. 

220. 
Fire-tooth.     Xed  B.  6:147.      C. 

890.     257. 
Firework-tizz.     Ari.  A.  5 :  175.    C 

Firework-nosegay.     Lm  A.  5 :  248. 

C.  775. 
Firing -place.      Mar.  Eel.  6:120. 

C.  876. 
Firk.     R.   &  B.  3:61.      C.  438. 

55- 
Firm  -  Miranda.     Red  Cott.   5:1. 

C.  736. 
Finn  -  fixed.      Lima,  2 :  376.      C. 

.■>()5. 
Firm-land.    Sor.  1 :  323.     C.  126. 
Firm-rooted.     A  Blot,  2:151.     C. 

219. 


357 


Pirm-set 


INDEX 


Fleece-marked 


Firm -set.     Para.  1:55.      C.  23. 

Firmlier.     Luria,  2  :  .389.     C.  310. 
First.     Camel-D.   6:259.     C.  937. 

94- 
Fiist-bora.     R.  &  B.  3:10.     C. 

418.     88. 
First-fruits.     Para.  1:95.     C.  38.. 

241. 
First-rate.      Two   Poets,    6:111. 

C.  872.    85. 
Fisc.    K.  &B.  3:4.     C.  416. 
Fish.    R.   &  B.  3:367.     C.  558. 

222. 
Fish-gorging.    Ari.  A.  5 :  172.     C. 

657. 
Fish-outbreak.    Fifine,4:410.    C. 

717. 
Fish-pond.    Straf.  1:185.     C.  71. 
Fish-taUs.    Up  — Down,  2:  33.    C. 

174. 
Fisher-father's.    Pope  &  N.  6 :  402 ; 

7 :  :J3.     C.  992. 
Fisher-folk.    R.  &  B.  3:  358.     C. 

555. 
Fisher-friend.    Inn  A.  5 :  290.     C. 

792. 
Fisher-king.    Fr.  Fu.  6:341.     C. 

970. 
Fisher's-signet.     R.  &  B.  3:358. 

C.  554. 
Fishing-giiU.     DisAl.  4:174.     C. 

379. 
FLsliing  -  smack.      Herv^,    5 :  358. 

C.  816. 
Fissure.    R.  &B.  3:13.     C.  419. 

179. 
Fit-or-unfitnesses.    FUght,  2:295. 

C.  212,. 
FitHer.     R.  &  B.  3  :  470.     C.  598. 

Ari.  A.  5 :  1()7.     C.  655. 

FitUest.    fcor.  1:311.     C.  121. 
Five-score.     Don.  6:194.     C  911. 
FLx.     Fust,  6:378.     C.  984.     71. 
Fizgig.     Fifine,  4:397.     C.  709. 
Flas.     R.   &  B.   3:146.     C.   472. 

285. 
Flag-bearer.    R.&B.  3:476.     C. 

601. 
Flag-bird.     Incident,   2:232.      C. 

251. 
Flag-like.     R.&B.  3: 88.     C.448. 
Flagou-juice.     Balau.    4 :  307.     C. 

619. 
Flail-Uke.      Doctor,     6:187.      C 

908. 
Flake-brilliance.     Two    Poets,   6: 

79.     C.  860. 


Flake-heaped.     Pan,  6:189.     C. 

909. 
Flakes.    R.  &  B.  3: 166.     C.  480. 

20. 
Flambeau-bearers.    Agam.  6:12. 

C.  834. 
Flame.     Pau.  1 :  15.     C.l.     219. 

Para.  1 :  89.     C.  o(i.     205. 

Childe  R.  2:336.     C.  289. 

214. 

R.  et  B.  3 :  161.     C.  478.    7. 

Prince  H.  4:374.     C.  699. 

218. 
Flame  -  breathing.     Fust,    6 :  374. 

C.  982. 
Flame-fed.     Crist.  &  M.  6:202. 

C.  914. 
Flame-robe.     Chris.    Sm.    6 :  314. 

C.  959.     268. 
Flaimel-bit.    Chas.  A.  6 :  356.     C. 

975. 
Flap-hat.    Nat.  in    D.    2:8.     C. 

166. 
Flare.    Bishop  B.  4: 104.     C.  354. 

244. 
Flashed.    Ari.  A.  5: 139.     C.  644. 

68. 
Flat-fish.     Fifine,  4:412.     C.  718. 

44- 
Flat-nose.     Ari.    A.    5 :  135.     C. 

642. 
Flattery.    Soul's    Tr.   2:. 310.     C. 

290.     175. 
Flautist.      Flute-M.    6:  421;  7:  75. 

C.  1000. 
Flavored.    R.&B. 3:  98.     C.  453. 

71. 
Flaw.    Straf.  1:155.     C.59.    275. 

R.   &  B.  3:119.     C.    461. 

196. 

R.   &    B.  3:333.     C.  545. 

156. 
Flawless.    R.   &    B.    3:324.     C. 

542.     77. 
Flax.    R.  &  B.  3:270.     C.  522. 

253- 
Flax-poUed.    R.  &  B.  3:  321.     C. 

541. 
Flaxen-wigged.    Englishm.  2 :  262. 

C.  262. 
Flaying  -  knife.     Waring,    2:274. 

C.  266. 
Fleece.    Two  in  C.  2 :  71.     C.  189. 

28. 
R.   &   B.  3:15.      C.  420. 


54- 
Fleece-marked. 
C.  769.     175. 
358 


Red  Cott.  5 :  86. 


Fleet-fugitive 


INDEX 


Flower-shape 


Fleet-fugitive,     Agam.  0:9.     C. 

KV.i. 
Fleeting.    Fifine,  4:420.     C.  723. 

74- 
Flesh.     Para.  1:44.     C.  10.     231. 

Straf.  1 :  130.     C.  53.     214. 

Saul,  2 :  52.     C.  LSI.     136. 

(Saul,  2:53.     C.  1S2.     236. 

Saul,  2 :  57.     C.  184.     95. 

R.   &    B.   3:8G.      C.   448. 

195. 

R.   &  B.    3:152.     C.  475. 

273. 

R.   ct  B.    3:351.     C.  552. 

180. 

R.   &  B.    3:425.     C.  581. 

205. 

■ Chris.-Eve,  4:30.     C.  326. 

211. 

■ Fia   Lippo,  4:75.     C.  343. 

121. 

J.    Lee,    4:102.      C.     370. 

287. 

Gold  Hair,  4: 105.     C.  377. 

276. 

Shop,  5 :  341.     C.  810. 

Ixion,  0 :  208.     C.  910.    178. 

Bad    D.   II.   6 :  395  ;  7 :  10. 

C.  989.    290. 
Flesh-aud-blood.    Colombe,  2 :  201 . 

C.  239. 
Flesh-bunch.    Pippa,    1:329.     C. 

129. 
Flesh-day.  _  Agam.  G :  49.     C.  848. 
Flesh-disguise.     Dan.  Bar.  6:311. 

C.  958. 
Flesh-freed.     La  S.  6 :  09.     C.  856. 
Flesh-half's.    Sor.  1 :  317.     C.  124. 
Flesh-imitating.     Death  in  D.   4 : 

205.     C.  391. 
Flesh-perfection.    Fr.Fu.  6:337. 

C.  908. 
Flesh-rags.    Fust,  6:  367.     C.  980. 
Flesh-robe.    R.&B.  3:365.     C. 

557.     232. 
Flesh-stuif.    By   Fire.  2:62.     C. 

180. 
Fleshly.    Last  R.  2:280.     C.  268. 
278. 

Fr.    Fu.    6:329.     C.    905. 

185. 
Flightier.     Chris.-Eve,   4:10.     C. 

3i9. 
Flinders.    Sor.  1 :  309.     C.  120. 
Flint.     EpU.  Sun,  6:252.     C.  934. 

80. 
Flint-dust.      Inn   A.   5:253,     C. 
777, 


Flint-stone.     Red  Cott.  5 :  28.     C. 

740.     253. 
Fliut's-service.    R.  &  B.   3:112. 

C.  458. 
Flittered.    R,«S;B.3:14.     C,420. 

229. 
Float.    Joch.  6  •.  224.     C.  923.    58. 
Floor.     R.  &  3.  3:165.     C.  480. 
85. 

Ari.A.5:1.38.     C.64.3.    75. 

Ned   B.  6:145.       C.    889. 

122. 
Floor-brick.    Red  Cott.  5 :  46.     C. 

753. 
Floor-work.    Sor.  1 :  316.     C.  123. 
Florence.     R.  «feB.  3:2.     C.  415. 

R.  &B.3:12.    C.419.    172. 

Florence-town.    Sor.  1 :  200.    C.  80. 
Florets.     Rudel,4:123.     C.  301. 
Florid  -  complexioned.     Pippa,    1 : 

3(i3.     C.  143. 
Flower.     Para.  1 :  52.  C.  22.     207. 
Gondola,   2:204.       C.   262. 

125- 

Her.  Trag.  2 :  316.     C.  281, 

107. 

R.  &B.3:281.   C.  520.   34. 

R.&B.3:320.    C.  540.   64. 

R.   &  B.  3:369.      C.  558. 

277. 
Flower-bed.    Red  Cott.  5 :  82.     C. 
707. 

Two  Poets,  0:  85.     C.  862. 

184. 
Flower-branch.     Joch.  0:219.     C. 

921. 
Flower-cup-erown.    Fifine,  4:  399. 

C.  711. 
Flower-dust.     Touch,   6 :  191.     C. 

910. 
Flower-face.      Mag.  Nat.  5 :  346. 

C.  812. 
Flower-fig,    R.  &  B.  3:255.     C. 

510. 
Flower-forth.      Agam.   6 :  45.     C. 

S4(). 
Flowei'-framed.     Bea.  Sig.  6 :  419 ; 

7  :  09.     C.  999. 
Flowei-hke.      Pippa,    1 :  3C0.      C. 

130.     251. 
Druses,    2  :  114.       C.    204, 

143. 

Druses,  3  :  68.     C.  441. 

Druses,    3 :  183.       C,    487. 

277. 

Fitine,  4 :  388.    C.705.    150. 

Flower-shape.     La  S.  6 :  58.     C 
851. 


359 


Flower-trail's 


INDEX 


Pont 


Flower-trail's.      Colombe,  2:205. 

C.  240. 
Flower -tree -branch.      R.   &   B. 

3:244.     C.  511. 
Flowers.       Para.    1:53.       C.    22. 

i8. 
J.    Lee,   4  :  15(1.        C.   374. 

154. 
Red  Cott.   5:30.      C.   748. 

2gi. 
Two  Poets,  6  :  79.     C.  859. 

97- 

Joch.  6:225.     C.  924.    252. 

Flowery-fine.    EpU.  Pacch.  5  :  388. 

C.  827. 
Flushier.     Chris.-Eve,  4:10.     C. 

319. 
Flute.    La  S.  6 :  62.     C.  853.    23. 
Flute-boys.     Ari.  A.   5:112.     C. 

633. 
Flute-breath.     Chris.  Sm.  6 :  314. 

C.  959.     230. 
Flute-gii-ls.     Ari.   A.  5:101.      C. 

629. 
Flute  -  piece.     Flute  -  M.  6  :  421  ; 

7 :  75.     C.  1000. 
Fly.     R.   &   B.   3:442.     C.  588. 
265. 

E.   &  B.   3:44.3.     C.  588. 

248. 

Prol.    Fif .    4 :  383.     C.  702. 

247. 

Fr.  Fu.  6 :  339.     C.  908. 

Fust,  6  :  380.     C.  985.     281. 

Fly-blow.      Fr.  Fu.  6:331.     C. 

Fly-flap.    Ari.  A.  5  :  163.     C.  653. 
Fly-king.     Pretty  W.   2:78.     C. 

191. 
Fly-wings.     R.   &   B.  3:44.     C. 

431. 
Fly's-foot.    Lovers'  Q.  2  :  30.     C. 

173. 
Foam.    Para.  1:116.    C.  46.    217. 

Sor.  1 :  279.     C.  108.     141 . 

Foam-fabric.     Red  Cott.  5:6.     C. 

7.38. 
Foam-fish-kind.     Ari.   A,  5:106. 

C.  mi. 

Foam-flower.    Ari.  A.  5  :  99.     C. 

628.     76. 
Foam-flutter.     Fifine,   4:442.     C. 

735. 
Foam-fringe.    Ari.  A.  5:237.     C. 

679. 
Foam-sheet.     Paa.  1 :  IS.      C.  9. 
Foam-showers.     Sor.  1 :  308.      C. 

120, 


Foam  -  splashed.     Mul^y,  6:164. 

C.  897. 
Foambows.      Up  —  Down,    2 :  33. 

C.  174. 
Foe.     R.-  &  B.  3 :  379.      C.  563. 

63. 
R.    &  B.   3:470.      C.  598. 

224. 
Foe -feeling.      Fil.   Bald.   5:379. 

C.  824. 
Foes.     R.   &  B.  3:84.     C.  447. 

199. 
R.   &   B.  3:470.      C.   598. 

224. 
Fog.       Flight,    2:297.       C.    274. 

245- 

R.   &    B.  3:13.      C.  419. 

238. 

R.    &   B.   3:87,      C.  448. 

27. 

Prospice,   4  :  216.      C.   395. 

48. 
Fog -smoke.      Olive,   6:157.      C. 

W)4.     256. 
Foiled.     Para.  1:33.     C.  14.     238. 

R.    &  B.  3:372.     C.  560. 

152. 
Follow.    R.  &  B.  3 :  340.     C.  548. 

277. 
FoUowed.    Lost  L.  2 :  3.     C.  164. 

149. 
FoUower.    R.&B.3:39.     C.  429. 

27. 
FoUy.      Pippa,    1:365.      C.    144. 

172. 
Toccata,     2:36.       C.     175. 

87. 
R.  <&.    B.    3:22.      C.  423. 

102. 
R.   &    B.   3:80.      C.  445. 

204. 
R.    &   B.   3 :  179.     C.  486. 

56. 
R.   &  B.  3:339.     C.  547. 

72. 
Ari.    A.    5:162.      C.    653. 

131. 

Pacch.  5:  329.     C.  806.    83. 

Two  Poets,  6 :  100.     C.  868. 

173. 
Epil.  Cher.  6 :  265.     C.  939. 

223. 
Folly's.     Balau.   4:279.      C.   608. 

193- 
Follies.     R.  &  B.  3  :  346.     C.  550. 

257- 
Font.     Sor.  1:202.     C.  78. 
Sor.  1 :  302.     C.  117. 


360 


Font-bearers 


INDEX 


Font  -  bearers.     Sor.   1 :  207.      C 

80. 
Font-tomb.     Sor.  1 :  321.     C.  125 
Food.      Dis  Al.   4:177.      C.   380. 
^247, 
Fool.    Para.  1 :  (iG.     C.  27.    222 

Para.  1 :  94.     C.  38,     32 

K.    &    B.    3:34.      C.   428. 

278. 

R.   &  B.   3 :  191.     C.   490. 

241. 
R.    &   B.   3:445.      C.  589. 

R.   &   B.   3:471.     C.  599. 

In    a  B.  4:136.      C.  360. 

T  ^55. 

Inn  A.  5  :  279.     C.  788.     6. 

Inn  A.  5 :  285.     C.  790.     9. 

Dan.  Bar.  6 :  305,     C.  95(i, 

214. 
Chris.  Sm.  6:  312.     C.  959. 

89. 
Cliris.  Sm.  6 :  320.     C.  962. 

197- 
Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  327.     C.  964. 

55. 


Fools, 


Forefinger 
C.  598. 


R.  &  B.  3 :  470. 

Prince  H.  4  :  370.     C.  697 

168. 
Fools'  -  conceit.      Ari,   A.   5  •  202 

c.  cm. 

P'ools'-paradise.     R.   &   B.   3-38 

C.  429.     26. 
Foolish  -  face  -  foremost.      Sludee 

4  :  23K.     C.  404. 
Foot.     Respecta.   2 :  80.     C    191 
17. 

A    Blot,    2 :  173,      C    228 

208. 

R.   &    B.    3:32,      C.  427 

,  273. 

J.    Lee,    4:164.      C.    376. 

201. 

Imp.    Aug,    6:428;    7:88, 

C.  1002.     37. 


Fool-face.    Fifine,  4 :  426.     C.  726 

291. 
Fool-foe.     Inn  A.  5  :  312.     C.  801. 
Fool  -  forefinger's.     Clive,    6 :  159 

C.  895. 
Fool -pranks.      Fust,   6:369.      C. 

981, 

Fool's-cheek.    A  Blot,  2 :  155.    C 

221. 
Fool's-costume.    R.  &  B.  3 :  381 

C.  563.     113. 
Fool's-eyes.      R.  &  B.  3:37.     C 

429.     275. 
Fool's-face.   R.   &   B.  3:77.      C 

444.     129. 
Fool's-flurry.    R.  &B.  3:79.    C 

445. 
Fool's-freak.     R.  &  B.  3 :  418,     C 

578.     59. 

Fool's-fortune.     Inn  A.  5 :  24(5.    C 

774. 
Fool's-play.     Epil.  Fer.  6 :  283.    C. 

946.     14. 
Fool's-speech.      R.    &   B,    3:139, 

C.  469. 
Fool's-sport.     R.  &  B.  3 :  396.     C. 

570. 
Fools.     Para.  1 :  89.     C.  36.     165 

R.    &   B.   3:352,      C.  552. 

158. 
R.  &B.3:422.    C,  580,  83 


Foot-display.     Ari.  A.  5  :  234.     C 

678. 
Foot -free.      Ari.   A.   5:209       C 

()70. 
Foot-kisser.    R.«&B.  3:344.     C 

549.     84. 
Foot-piece.     Clive,  6 :  157.    C,  894 

256. 
Foot-reach,    R,  &  B,  3:434.     CV 

585. 
Foot-sore.     R.   &   B.   3:343.      C 

549.     76. 
Foot-stamp.    Sor.  1 :  306.     C.  119. 
Foot -sure.      Inn  A.   5:256.      C. 

779. 
Foot-wiper.    R.&B.  3:344.     C. 
^  549.     84. 
Footprints.     Para.    1 :  40.      C,  17 

182. 
Footsteps.       Luria,     2 :  387.       C 

oOil. 
Footsteps'.     Bad  D.   III.  6:398: 

7  :  22.     C.  990.     183. 
Force.     Prince  H.  4 :  366.     C.  695. 
90. 

Fust,  6 :  380.     C.  985.     252. 

Fordnig-place.     Luria,  2 :  397.     C. 


313. 
Fordone.     R.   &   B.  3:203. 

519. 
Fore-enjoined.    Agam.  6 :  29, 

841. 
Forechosen.     R.  &  B.  3 :  60, 

438.     72. 
Foredone.      A    Blot,   2  :  178. 

230. 
Forefinger.   Up  —  DoAvn,  2 :  33.   C. 

174.     44. 

361 


Forefinger-plucked 


INDEX 


Fountains 


Forefinger  -  plucked.      Red   Cott. 

5  :  7.     C.  T.Hi). 
Forewent.    li.  &   B.  3:232.      C. 

507. 
Forest-creatures.    Para.  1:  77.    C. 

31. 
Forest-flats.    Ari.  A.  5:207.     C. 

670. 
Forest-monarch.    Ari.   A.  5  :  102. 

C.  (J53. 
Forest  -  thridding.      Ger.     de    L. 

(j :  350.     C.  073. 
Forest -top.      Para.     1:118.      C. 

47. 
Forest  -  tree.      Para.      1 :  9(5.      C. 

38. 
Forest-wights.      Sor.   1:210.      C. 

81. 
Forest-work.     Flight,   2:294.     C. 

273. 
Forget.     Para.  1:27.     C.  12.    204. 

La  S.  G :  53.     C.  849.    84. 

Two  Poets,  6 :  92.     C.  865. 

256. 

Joch.  6  :  227.     C.  925.     54. 

Forgets.     Ari.  A.  5  :  121.     C.  637. 
255. 

• Epil.  Sun,  6 :  252.     C.  934. 

80. 
Forgives.    Before,  2 :  87.     C.  194. 

28. 
Forgiveness.      Camel -D.     0:259. 

C.  937.     84. 
Forgotten.     Sor.    1:287.     C.   111. 

255. 
Forky.     R.  &  B.  3 :  404.     C.  572. 
Form.     Druses,   2:132.      C.    211. 

86. 
R.    &   B.   3:324.     C.    542. 

77- 

Inn  A.  5  :  243.     C.  773.     24. 

Formality.     King    C.    1:407.     C. 

100.     136. 
Formidable.      Herv4,   5:350.     C. 

810. 
Formidable.      Luria,   2:374.      C. 
304.     51. 

R.&B.3:423.  C.580.  288. 

Formosus.    R.  &   B.  3  :  350.     C. 

554 
Forsake.     Soul's  Tr.   2:338.     C. 

289.     92. 
Forsakes.     Straf.  1  :  181.      C.  09. 

171. 
Fortalice.    Two  Poets,  6 :  91 .     C. 

804. 
Forth-figure.     Flute-M.  6  :  432  ;  7  : 

97.     C.  1004. 


Forth-flashing.    Bea.  Sig.  6:420. 

7  :  70.     C.  999. 
Forth-puttiug.    Agam.  6:20.     C. 

838. 
Forthright.     Andrea,   4:84.      C. 

34(). 
Fortified.     R.  &B.3:366.    C.558. 

33. 
Fortitude.    R.  &  B.  3:149.      C. 

473.     184^ 
Fortress.    R.  &  B.  3 :  30(5.    C.  557. 

212. 
Fortune.    Para.  1 :  74.    C.  30.    197. 

Inn  A.  5  :  252.    C.  777.     98. 

Imp.  Aug.  0  :  420  ;  7  :  84.  C, 

1001.    77. 
Fortune-founding.     Red  Cott.  5 : 

21.     C.  744. 
Forty.    Red  Cott.  5  :  20.     C.  744. 

15- 
Forty-and-over.   Pacch.  5  :  331.    C 

807. 
Forty-five.     R.  &   B.   3:150.     C. 

470.     35. 
Forward-face.     Epil.   Fer.  6:283. 

C.  940.     35- 
Foster.     Fhght,   2:306.      C.  278. 

78. 
Fought.     Straf.    1:189.      C.    73. 
268. 

R.&B.3:35.     C.428.    34. 

R.&B.3:371.  C.559.  198, 

Foul.    Sor.  1 :  194.     C.  75.     70. 

R.  &B.3:273.  C.523.  79. 

Foul-mouthed.   R.  &B.3:474.   C. 

(500. 
Foulness.    Soul's  Tr.   2:355.     C. 

297.     15. 
Foundation-stock.     Prince   H.  4  : 

305.  _  C.  (595. 
Fountain-brilliance.       Balau.     4 : 

293.     C.  014. 
Foimtain-edge.  Fr.Fu.  0:330.    C. 

9()5. 
Fountain-fence.    R.  &  B.  3 :  256. 

C.  51(). 
Fountain-head.    R.  &  B.  3:417. 

C.  578. 
Fountain-side.     R.   &   B.   3:110. 

C.  457. 
Fountain-source.      R.  &   B.  3:3. 

C.  415. 
Fountain-sport.      R.   &  B.  3:21. 

C.  422. 
Fountain-water.       Balau.    4 :  276. 

C.  (507. 
Fountains.     Chris.-Eve,  4 :  13.     C 

320.     274. 


362 


Four 


INDEX 


Friend-finding 


Four.  La  8.0:50.  C.S50.  159. 
Foui'-and-tweiity.     Soul's   Tr.    2 : 

.T)!).     C.  2!IS.     131. 
Fom-days'-dying.     K.  &  B.  3:  25. 

C.  i2-i. 
Four-hours'.     R.  &  B.  .3:55.     C. 

435. 
Four-legff'd.     Ari.  A.  5 :  220,     C. 

07:'.. 

Four-square.  Saul,  2  :  .5.3.  C.  182. 
Four-years-old.     Inn  A.  5 :  2'J2.  C. 

79.3. 
Four-years'-intimate.     R.  tfe  B.  3: 

403.     C.  590. 
Fourier.      Prmce   H.   4:341.      C. 

mi. 

Fox-dam.  Iv^n,  0:140.  C.  88(). 
Fox-faced.  R.&B.3:13.  C.419. 
Fox's.     R.   &  B.  3:6.      C.  410. 

80. 
Fragmentary.    R.&B.3:395.    C. 

5()9.     265. 
Frail.     R.    &   B.  3  :  396.     C.  509. 

122 

Frails'.  EngUshni.  2  :  258.  C.200. 
FraUty.     R.  &  B.  3  :  78.     C.  445. 

38. 
Frame-work.    Sor.  1  :  219.     C.  85. 
Framework.    Red  Cott.  5  :  10.    C. 

742. 
Franealeu.      Two    Poets,    6 :  110. 

C.  872. 
France.     Red  Cott.  5 :  11.     C.  740. 

Red  Cott.    5:28.     C.   747. 

106. 
Franceschini,  Count  Guido.     R.  & 

B.  3  :  18.     C.  421. 
Francis.     R.  &  B.  3  :  146.     C.  472. 
Franco's,  Ser.    R.  &  B.  3  :  155.    C 

470. 
Frank's.    Druses,  2  :  115.     C  204. 

116. 
Frank-forward.     R.  &  B.  3  :  102. 

C.  478. 
Freckles.     R.   &  B.  3:110.      C. 

4()0.     100. 
Free.    Sor.  1  ;  224.     C.  87.     81. 

Fifiue,4:385.    0.703.    184. 

Fifine,  4  :  403.     C.  713.    51. 

Free-distent.     Ber.  de  M.  0  :  299. 

C.  953. 
Freelier.    Sor.  1 :  203.     C.  102. 
French.     Red  Cott.  5  :  27.     C.  740. 

42. 
Frenetic.    R.&B.3:227.    C.  505. 

Fifine,  4:  385,     C.  70.3.  184. 

Frenzy-fit.      Forgiv.    5:301.      C. 

818,     12. 


Frenzy-stung.     R .  &  B .  3  :  370.    C. 

5.59. 
Fresco-paint.     Waring,  2 :  273.    C. 

205. 
Fresco-splashing.      Bea.    Sig.    0 : 

419;  7:  71.     C.  999. 
Fresh.       Fifine,    4:440,      C.    7.34. 

57- 
Fresh-blown,    Sor.  1 :  207.    C.  104. 
Fresh-broke.     R.  &  B.  3  :  157.    C. 

477. 
Fresh-chalked.      Sor,    1:286.      C. 

111. 
Fresh-chapleted.    Sor.  1 :  194.     C. 


Fresh-come.    Ari,  A,   5 :  139.     C. 

(i44. 
Fresh-cut.     R.    &   B,   3:282.     C. 

.52(5. 
Fresh-drawn.     Prince    H,   4 :  339. 

C.  085. 
Fresh-flowing.    Agam.   6:41.     C. 

845. 
Fresh-inspired.     Luria,2:390,    C, 

310.     167. 
Fresh-mutilated.     Sor.  1 :  269.     C. 

104. 
Fresh-poured,      St,    Prax.    4 :  89. 

C.  348. 
Fresh-remembered,    R.   &   B.  3: 

170.     C.  482, 
Fresh-singed,     Holy-C.  2  :  317.    C. 

282. 
Fresh-squeezed.     Pan,  6  :  188.     C. 

909. 
Fresh-tinselled.    R.  &   B.  3:1.34, 

C.  408. 
Fret.     Fifine,  4:  431.    C.  729.    219. 
Fret-worked.     Balau.   4:314.     V. 

022. 
Fretful-blooded.      Luria,     2 :  395. 

C.  312. 
Fretless.     Prol.   La  S.   6:53.     C. 

849.     233. 
Fribble.     R.  &  B.  3: 191.     C.  490, 

241. 
Friedricli.    Sor.  1 :  195.     (7.  75. 
Friend.     Para.  1 :  84.     C.  .34.    267. 

Straf.  1  :  191.     C.  74.     199. 

R.    &    B.    3:37.     C.   429. 

208. 

R.    i\:    B.   3:182.     C.  487. 

46. 

Pict.  Ig.  4 :  73.     C.  342.   60. 

Fr.    Fu.    6:328.      C.   905. 

96. 
Friend-finding.     Soul's  Tr.  2 :  339, 

C.  290.     246. 

363 


Friend-making 


IXDEX 


Full-sail 


Friend-making.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  339. 

C.  li!H».     246. 
Friend-test.    Ari.   A.   5 :  181.     C. 

(■>()(). 
Friend's  -  ^vo^d.      Inn   A.   5  :  294. 

C.  794.     86. 
Friends.      Para.     1:64.      C.    26. 

172. 
Pippa,     1:331.       C.     130. 

150- 
In    a   B.  4:134.      C.  365. 


134- 
J.    Lee,    4 :  155. 
280. 


C.    374. 


Friendless  -  people's.    Sor.  1 :  193. 

C.  75. 
Friendly.     Ari.    A.    5 :  120.      C. 

636. 
Friendship's.    K.  «feB.  3:63.     C. 

4:39.     15. 
Frigid.    R.  &  B.  3 :  446.     C.  589. 
Frightful.      Piet.    Ig.  4:73.      C. 

342.    252. 
Fritters.    R.  &  B.  3 :  26.     C.  425. 

i2g. 
Frog.      Fifine,    4:416.      C.    720. 

98. 
Frog-jaws.     M.-m.    Meg,  6 :  405 ; 

7:41.     cats. 
Frog-merriment.     Ari.  A.  5 :  235. 

C.  ()79. 
Frolic-fond.    Red  Cott.  5 :  93.     C. 

771. 
Front.     Para.  1 :  110.     C.  44.    45. 
Front-court.      Pacch.   5:330.      C. 

806. 
Front  -  thrust.      King   V.   1:388. 

C.  153. 
Froth-flake.      Pippa,    1:327.      C. 

129. 
Frowsy.    R.  &  B.  3 :  8.     C.  417. 
Frozen-child's-flesh.    Agam.  6 :  47. 

C.  847. 
Fruit.     Saul.  2 :  52.     C.  186.     136. 

By    Fire.    2:66.      C.   187. 

231. 

SonFs  Tr.   2  :  344.     C.  292. 

228. 

R.   &    B.   3:4S.      C.  433. 

82. 

R.   &  B.  3:252.     C.  514. 

286. 

Baku.  4:  325.     C.  626.    71. 

Joch.  6  :  225.     C.  924.     252. 

Fruit-balls.    Englishm.  2  :  260.    C. 

261. 
Fruit-bearing.     Fust,  6:369.     C. 

981. 


Fruit-boats.     Sor.  1 :  254.     C.  98. 
Fruit-flower.    Ari.  A.  5  :  114.     C. 

034. 
Fruit-flushed.     Pau.  1 :  12.     C.  6. 
Fniit-o'ercrusted.     De  Gus.  2 :  45. 

C.  178. 
Fruit-pendants.     Ger.  de  L.  6 :  349. 

C.  973. 
Fruit  -  shaped.      A    Face,   4 :  219. 

C.  3«). 
Fruit-sort.    Solil.  2 :  13.     C.  168. 
Fruit-sparkles.     Sor.   1 :  252.      C. 

98. 
Fruits.     Prince  H.  4 :  336.     C  684. 

174. 
Fruitless.     Soul's  Tr.   2:339.     C. 

290.     181. 
Fuddling-cap.    Ned  B.  6 :  146.    C. 

889. 
Fugitive.     Specul.   6:394;    7:13. 

C.  988.     162. 
Fulgurant.    R.  &  B.  3:224.      C. 

504.     272. 
Fuliginous.    Red  Cott.  5:41.     C. 

752.     107. 
Full.    R.   &  B.  3:228.     C.    505. 

158. 
Full-blooded.     Chas.  A.  6:3(J0. 

977. 
Full -bloom.     Fifine,  4:414.     C. 

719.     117. 
Red   Cott.   5:35.      C.  749. 

185. 

La  S.  6:58.    C.  851.    81. 

Full-bodied.     Fust,  6:376.      C. 

983. 
Full-circle.     Phei.  6 :  125.     C.  878. 
FuU-faeing.     Don.  6 :  196.     C.  912. 
Full-fed.     Ivkn,  6  :  135.     C.  883. 
FuD-flare.     R.  &   B.  3:377.      C. 

5(i2.     128. 
Full -fraught.      Sor.    1:204.      C. 

79. 
Full-galloping.      Incident,   2:231. 

C.  251. 
Full-grown.    R.   &   B.  3:27.     C. 
425.     235. 

Ari.    A.    5:169.      C.   656. 

263. 
Full-measure.    Ned  B.  6: 144.    C. 

888. 
Full-orbed.     Reph.  6:432;  7:97. 

C.  1004. 
Full-organ.    Master  H.  2  :  96.     C. 

197. 
Full  -  rondure.      Bea.  Sig.  6  :  419 ; 

7:71.     C.  999. 
Fu-U-sail.    J.  Lee,  4:154.    C.  373. 


364 


Full-sheaved  INDEX  Galley-slaves 

Waring,     2 :  270. 


Full  -  sheaved. 

C.  2(i4. 
Full-splash.     Sludge,  4:239.     C. 

405. 
FuU-statured.     Bar.  de  M.  6 :  295. 

C.  952.    77. 
Fullmoon-fashion.     Agam,   6  :  12. 

C.  834. 
Fulness.    Abt  V.  4 :  185.     C.  383. 

72. 
Fulsome  -  fine.     R.  &  B,  3:150. 

C.474.     61. 
Fumbling.     R.  &   B.  3:321.     C. 

541.     243. 
Fume.    R.  &B.  3:1.     C.  414. 

Pietro,     6:109.      C.     899. 

88. 

Chris.  Sm.  6 :  318.     C.  961. 

2ig. 
Fume -fed.     Ari.  A.  5:160.     C. 

652, 
Fume -weed.     Englishm,  2:260. 

C.  261. 
Fumed-forth.     Flight,  2: 291.     C. 

272.     268. 
Fim-day.     Paceh.  5:330.     C.  806. 
Fungaio.     Paceh.  5 :  318.     C.  802. 
Fur-suit.     Flight,  2  :  299.     C.  275. 
Fur-tuft.      R.   &  B.  3:102.      C. 

454. 
Furnace-coals.     R.   &  B.  3:372. 

C.  560.    216. 
Furnace-smoke.     Chris. -Eve,  4  :  5. 

C.  318. 
Furify.     Fifine,  4:417.     C.  721. 
Furry-framed.     Ger.  de  L.  6 :  349. 

C.  973. 
Furtherances.     Druses,  2  :  112.    C. 

203. 
Fury-fit.     R.  &  B.  3:5.     C.  416. 

118. 
Two  Poets,  6 :  74.     C.  866. 

22 

Furze-sprig.'    R.&B.  3:451.     C. 

591. 
Fused.    R.   &  B.  3:11.     C.  419. 

232. 
R.   &  B.  3  :  106.     C.  456. 

37. 
Future.    Para.  1 :  97.    C  39.    205. 
Colombe,  2  :  193.      C.   236. 

182. 
R.   &   B.  3:278.     C.  525. 

266. 
Andrea,     4:85.      C.      347. 

91. 
Ger.  de  L.  6  :  351.     C.  973. 

182. 


G 

Gabble.    R.  &  B.  3: 153.     C.  475, 

no. 
Gabriel.     Boy  &  Ang.  2 :  239.      C. 

254. 
R.   &    B.    3:15.     C.    420, 

ISO- 
Gaby.    R.  &  B.  3:302.     C.  534. 

130- 
Gad-fly.    R.  «fe  B.  3 :  163.     C.  479, 

268. 
Gadfly-like,    R.  &  B.  3:337.     C. 

547. 
Gadbee.    Artemis,  4:  61.     C.  a37, 
Gadge.    Soul's  Tr.  2:  345.     C.292, 
Gaetano.     R.  &  B.  3  :  475.    C.  600, 
Gain.     Para.  1 :  39.     C.  17.  126. 

Para.  1 :  91.     C.  36.     122. 

R.   &  B.   3:420.     C.  579, 

137- 
Chris.-Eve,  4 :  27,     C.  325. 

153. 

Andrea,  4:85.     C.  347,    91. 

J,    Lee,    4:161.      C.    375, 

146. 
Death  in  D.  4 :  202,     C.  390. 

48. 
Prince  H.  4  :  363.     C.  694. 

116. 

Fifine,  4 :  441.     C.  734.  268. 

Chas.    A.   6:362.     C.   978. 

171. 
Reph.    6:433;  7:100.      C. 

1004.     246. 
Gain-cravings.    Agam.  6  :  13.     C 

835. 
Gained.    R.  &  B.  3:  274,     C.  523. 

209. 
R.   &    B.  3:467.     C.  597. 

262. 
Gainings.    Ber.  de  M.  6 :  295,     C, 

952. 
Galatians.    Solil.  2:13.     C.    168. 

45- 
Galen.     Para.  1 :  105.     C.  42. 
Galilean.     R.&B.  3:39.     C.  430. 
Galileo's.    R,   &    B.    3:394.     C, 

569. 
GaUngale.      Ari.    A.   5:103.      C. 

630.     242. 
Gall-drop.    Red    Cott.  5:84.     C. 

768. 
Gall-nuts.     Bean-St.    6:282.      C. 

94().     109. 
GaUey-slaves.    Bad  D.  11.  6 :  395 ; 

7  :  17.     C.  989, 


365 


Galliard 


INDEX 


Generous 


Gallmrd.    K.&B.  3:37.     C.  429. 

i6o. 
Gallisraskin.     R.  «S;  B.  3  :  280.     C. 


La     S.    6:56.     C. 
3  :  2S9.     C. 


Gambetta's. 

850. 
Gambols.     R.   &    B, 

527.     184. 
Game.    Stat.    &    B.    2:328.     C. 
286.     184. 

Worst,      4:173.      C.     379. 

285, 
Gamesome.    R.  &  B.  3  :  173,     C. 

483. 
Gamester.     R.   &    B.   3:  151.     C. 

474.    27. 
Gamester-phrase.     Inn  A.   5  :  312. 

C.  801. 
Gamesters.    R.  &  B.  3: 309.     C. 

53(5.     27. 
Ganmiers.     Apol,    &    F.    6:294. 

C.  952. 
Gandolf.    St.Prax.4:89.     0.348. 
Gangrene.     R.   &   B.   3:183.     C. 

487.     156. 
Gangrene  -  blotches.     Para.   1 :  88. 

C.  36. 
Gape.   Soul's  Tr.  2:  348.    C.294.  3. 
Gape-jaw.    Shop,  5:  338.     C.  809. 
Gaped.    House,    5:337.     C.  809. 

87. 
Garbage-feast.    R.  &  B.  3:367. 

C.  558. 
Garble.     Old  Pict.  2  :  39.     C.  176. 

99.  ... 

Garden-chance.    Ari.    A.   5  :  133. 

C.  642. 
Garden-constructing.    Sor.  1 :  273. 

C.  106. 
Garden-ffroiind.      Two    Poets,   6 : 

84.     C.  862. 
Garden-mould.    R.   &    B.    3:14. 

C.  420. 
Garden-path.    R.    &    B.    3:453. 

C.  592.     8. 
Garden-plot.     R.  &  B.  3:  428.    C. 

582.     250. 
Garden-quarter.      R.  &  B.  3:14. 

C.  420. 
Garden-trees.     Pan.  1 :  12.     C.  6. 
Garden-voices.      Serenade,    2 :  75. 

C.  190. 
Garden-waU.    R.&B.3:218.     C. 

501. 
Garden-way.     Forgiv.  5 :  359,     C. 

817. 
Gardener.    Prince  H,  4 :  375,     C. 

699.    67, 


Garish,     Lm  A.  5 :  274.     C.  785. 
Garland-crown.      Flight,     2 :  203. 

C.  27(i. 
Garlic-clove.    R.  &   B.  3 : 8.     C 

417. 
Garments.     R.  &   B.   3:210,     C. 

498.     19. 
Garner.     Soul's  Tr.  2 :  343.    C.  291. 

237- 

R.&B.3:146.  C.472.  272. 

Garnishry.     Para.  1 :  65.     C.  27. 

R.&B.3:118.  C.  4()1.  158. 

Garret-sides,    How  it  S.  4  :  60.     C 

337. 
Gastro-knemian.      Fifine,    4 :  407. 

C.  715. 
Gate.    Inn  A. 5:. 309.    C.  799.   276. 

Fr.Fu.6:329.   C.  965.    189. 

Inap.  6  :  400 ;  7  :  26.    C.  991. 

69. 
Gate-bolts.    How,  2:4.     C.  164. 
Gate-vein.    Sor.  1:201.     C.  78. 
Sor.  1 :  251.     C.  97. 


Gates.    Gold  H.  4 :  169.     C.  378. 

192. 
Gather,    Pretty  W.  2 :  79.     C.  191. 

210. 
Gathered.    Gram.  Fun.  2: 311.    C. 

279.     21. 
Gaucehne's.    Colombe,  2 :  182.    C. 

231. 
Gauds.      Druses,   2:99.      C.   198. 

54- 
Gauthier.     Count  G.  2:234.      C. 

252. 
Gav.    Bad  D.   II.  6:395;   7:16. 

v.  989.    45. 
Gay-coated.     Inn  A.  5 :  310.     C. 

800. 
Gay-colored.    R.  «fe  B.  3  :  91.     C. 

450. 
Gay-garlanded.      Ari.   A.  5  :  240. 

C.  681. 
Gayety.    R.  &  B.  3  :  458.     C.  594. 

27. 
Gaze.    R.  &  B.  3:470.     C.  598. 
187. 

Sonnet,  C.  11.     91. 

Gem-indenture.      Ari.   A.   5  :  168. 


Fifine,   4:414.      C. 


C.  6.55. 
Gem-tipped. 

719. 
Gems.     Red  Cott.  5 :  16.     C.  742. 

279. 
Geniiiiiani.     Chas.  A.  6 :  356.     C. 

975. 
Generous.    In  a  B.  4: 133,     C.364. 

124. 

366 


Genesheim 


INDEX 


Gilt-gingerbread 


Genesheim .    Fust,  6 :  370.     C.  981 . 
Genius.    Soul's  Tr.  2  :  356.    C.297. 

65. 

Inn  A.  5:287.     C.  790.     39. 

Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  323.     C.  9G3. 

226. 
Genius-haunters.    Sor.  1 :  234.    C. 


R.  &  B.  3 :  36. 


C.  428. 
C. 


91. 
Genoese, 

44. 
Gentleman.    A  Blot,   2:172, 

228.     215. 
Gentleman-squire.      R.    &    B.   3 : 

150.     C.  474. 
Gently-grieving.    Agam.  6:5.     C. 

832. 
Gentry-fashioned.     Red   Cott.    5 : 

46.     C.  7.'>3.     226. 
Geology.    Toccata,  2 :  36.     C.  175. 

157- 
Geometry.    Prince  H.  4 :  344.     C. 

687. 
Geranium-flower.     Evelyn,  2  :  23. 

C.  171.    . 
Geranium-shoots.      Red    Cott.   5 : 

82.     C.  7()7. 
Gerard.    A  Blot,  2 :  144.     C.  217. 
Germ.     Ben  Ezra,  4 :  187.     C.  384. 
154. 

Bea.  Sig.  6 :  412 ;  7 :  58.     C 

996.     89. 
Germs.    La  S.  6:  75.    C.  859.   138. 
Germans.     Dev.  6  :  430 ;  7 :  92.     C. 

1003. 
G^rome.     Fifine,  4 :  402.     C.  712. 
Gesture.     Chris. -Eve,   4:29.      C. 

326.     193. 
Get.    Joh.  Agri.  4 :  71.    C.341.   93- 
Getting.     Old  Pict.  2  :  42.     C.  177. 

32. 
GhastlUy.    R.   &   B.   3:396.      C. 

569.     245. 
Ghastly.    Eas.-Day,  4 :  55.    C.335. 

46. 
Ghost.    Pau.  1:2.     C.  3,     181. 

Stat.  &  B.  2 :  327.     C.  285. 

70. 

Chikle  R.  2:331.     C.  287. 

244. 

R.&B.3:403.  C.572.  216. 

Chris.-Eve,  4 :  25.     C.  324. 

145. 

Inn  A.  5: 286.    C.  790.    146. 

St.   Mart.  5:353.     C.  814. 


149. 

Joeh.6:223.     C.923.    257 

Ghost-bereft.     St.   Mart.    5:354 
C.  815. 


Ghost-grandeur.     Ari.   A.   5  :  192. 

C.  6(i5. 
Ghost-invoker.    Balau.4:320.    C. 

(;24. 

Ghost-like.    Chas.  A.  6 :  360.     C. 

977.     169. 
Ghost-thing.    R.  &  B.  3 :  441.     C. 

588. 
Giacinto,  Don.    R.  &  B.  3 :  26.    C. 

424. 
Giant.     Pau.  1:25.     C.  11.     90. 
Giant-ghosts.    Pau.  1 :  18.     C.  9. 
Giant-growth.    Ari.  A.  5 :  184.    C. 

()(i2. 
Giant-limb.     Para.  1 :  119.     C.  47. 
Giant-slaj'ing.    Ari.  A.  5 :  217.     C. 

672. 
Giant's.     Straf.    1:153.      C.  59. 

175- 

Joch.  6 :  214.     C.  919.     59. 

Giants.      Childe    R.    2 :  336.      C. 

289.     109. 
Giaours.    Bad  D.  II.  4 :  396 ;  7:18. 

C.  989. 
Gibbon.      La    S.  6:74.      C.  858. 

132. 
Gibe.      Ari.   A.  5:122.      C.  637. 

200. 
Gibes.    Ari.   A.  5:102.      C.  629. 

189. 
Gibson.    Youth  &  A.  4 :  217.     C. 

3<)6. 
Gift.    One  Word,  4: 126.    C.362. 1. 

In    a    B.   4:138.      C.   366. 

49. 

Fr.    Fu.    6:333.      C.    967. 

275. 
Gift-laden.     Ari.   A.  5 :  164.      C. 

6.-)4. 
Gifts.     Para.  1:39.     C.  17.     273. 

Para.  1 :  97.     C.  39.     284. 

Red   Cott.   5:72.      C.   763. 

94- 

Epil.  Melon-S.  6:242.      C. 

i«0.     204. 
Fr.    Fu.    6:333.      C.    966. 

94- 
Chas.  A.  6:362.      C.  978. 

139- 
Gigadibs.     Bishop  B.  4:92.     C. 


iV^. 


C.  37 


Gigantic.    J.  Lee,  4:161. 

227. 
Gilded.    R.  &  B.  3: 153.     C.  475. 

25- 
Giles.    Childe  R.  2 :  333.     C.  288. 
Gilt-gingerbread.   Red  Cott.  5 :  51. 

C.  755. 
367 


Gimlet-holes 


INDEX 


Glory-giver 


Gimlet-holes.      Fust,  6 :  369,      C. 

981. 
Gin.    Sor.  1 :  2.57.     C.  100.     52. 
Ginger-pop.     EpU.  Pacch.   5 :  394. 

C.  H29. 
Gingluiglv.     Sor.  1 :  30.5.     C.  119. 
Giotto.     Old  Pict.  2:  37.     C.  170. 
Giovambattista.    R.   &  B.  3:27. 

C.  425. 
Girandole.     R.   &  B.  3:22.      C. 

42.3.     162. 
Gird.     K.  &  B.  3:  468.     C.  597.  3. 
Girdle-chase.     Ari.  A.  5 :  190.     C. 

604. 
Girdle-girth.     Fifine,   4:416.      C. 

720.     24. 
Girl.      Gold   H.   4:165.      C.   377. 

15- 
R.    &   B.   3:39.      C.   429. 

291. 
R.  &  B.   3:263.     C.  519. 

69. 
R.    &   B.   3:408.      C.  574. 

272. 
Pearl,    6:393;    7:12.      C. 

988.     147. 
Girl-brides.     R.&B.  3:245.     C. 

512. 
Girl-dancers.     Ari.  A.  5 :  112.     C. 

(J33. 
Girl-goldling-beetle-beauty.      Ari. 

A.  5:114.     C.  6:34. 
Girl-Moon.     Pan,  6 :  190.     C.  909. 
Girl-show.     Pippa,  1 :  366.     C.  144. 
Girl -wife.      R.   &   B.  3:84.      C. 

447.     256. 
Girl's.    Two  Poets,  6:116.     874. 

147- 
Girls.     Bea.  Sig.     6:416;    7:65. 

C.  998.     62. 
Girlishness.    Red  Cott.  5  :  66.     C 

761.     237. 
Girns.     Old  Pict.  2 :  .38.     C.  176. 
Gismond.     Count  G.  2:2,34.      C. 

252. 
Give.    Sor.  1 :  228.     C.  88.    249. 

Old    Pict.   2:41.      C.   177. 

45. 

R.   &  B.   3:146.     C.  472. 

272. 

One  Word,  4 :  127.     C.  363. 

270. 

J.    Lee,    4:101.      C.    375. 

88. 
Give-and-guard.    R.&B.  3:410. 

C.  575. 
Gives.      Fifine,    4:418.      C.    721. 

282. 


Glad.    Para.  1:83.     C.  34.     155. 

Pippa,     1:354.       C.     139. 

285. 

St.   Mart.   5:352.     C.   814. 

280. 
Glad-news-bringer.    Agam.  6 :  21. 

C.  8;!8. 
Gladlier.     Fears,   6 :  345,     C.  811. 

148. 
Gladstone.     Inn    A.    5:254.     C. 

778. 
Glance.    Ger.  de  L.  6 :  349.    C.  972. 

187. 
Glass.    King  V.  1:381.     C.  150. 
92. 

R.   &  B.  3:385.     C,  565. 

161. 
Glass-conglobed.  Bar.  de  M.  6 :  302. 

C.  9.55. 
Glassing.     Ari.  A.  5:99.     C.  628. 
274. 

Goldoni,  C.  910.     95. 

Gleaners.      Englishm.   2 :  260.     C. 

261.     168. 
Gleaning-time's.    Joch.  6:224.    C. 

924. 
Glee,    ChUde  R,  2:330.     C.  287. 

167. 
Glibly.     Apol.   &  F,  6:288.     C. 

949.     138. 
Glimmer.      R,   &   B,  3:256,      C. 

51(J.     94. 
Gloom.    Para.  1:122.    C48.    128. 

Bean-St,   6:273.       C.   942, 

91. 
Gloriously  -  decisive,       R,    &   B. 

3:. 392.     C.  568.     160. 
Glory.     Para.  1 :  60.     C.  25.     189. 

Sor.  1 :  214.     C.  83.     258. 

Love,  2 :  26,     C.  172,    95, 

Stat.  &  B.  2:  326,     C.  285. 

275. 
R.   &  B.  3:428,      C.  582. 

149. 

Deaf  &  D.  4:  216.     C.  .395. 

50. 

Ari.  A.  5:2,33.        C.  678. 

221. 

Ger.  de  L.  6:  348.     C.  972. 

23. 
Glory-bath.      Inn  A.   5:244.      C. 

774.     139. 
Glory-crowned.     Prince  H.  4 :  344. 

C.  687. 
Glory -garland.      Last  R,   2:281. 

C.  268. 
Glory-giver.    Bean-St.  6 :  273.     C. 
942.    91. 


368 


Glory-glitter 


Glory-glitter.     Ger.   de  L.  6:348. 

C.  <J72. 
Glory-guarded.     Bea.  Sig.  6 :  416  ; 

7 :  (iU.     C.  998. 
Glove.     Italian,  2:254.     C.  2,59. 
K.   &  B.  3:27.       C.  425. 

128. 

Glow.    R.  &  B.  3:428.     C.  582. 

149. 
Glow-worm.      Popul.   2  :  90,      C. 

195.     238. 
Glowworm.       Pisgah    II.    5 :  343. 

C.  811.     239. 
Glows.      Luria,    2:392.      C.   311. 

104. 
Glut.    Para.  1:67.     C.  28.    86. 
Guawed.     Ari.  A.  5 :  115.     C  035. 

132. 
Guawn.    Red  Cott.  5:  24.     C.  745. 

255. 
Go.      Prospice,    4:216.      C.    395. 

243. 
Go-between.    R.  &  B.  3: 129.     C. 

4G5. 
Go-eart.     Para.  1 :  64.     C.  26. 
Go-down-it-must.       Epil.    Pacch. 

5 :  391.     C.  828. 
Goes.       Balau.  4:302.       C.  617. 

286. 
Goad.    R.   &  B.  3:325.     C.  542. 

63. 
Goal.    Ber.deM.  6:296.     C.  952. 

96. 
Goat.    Fifine,  4:417.     C.  721. 
Goat-God.     Phei.  6 :  127.     C.  879. 
Goat-grinning.    Ari.  A.  5 :  132.    C 

641. 
Goat-skin.      Eehet.    6 :  154.        C. 

893. 
Goat-song.      Ari.   A.  5 :  115.      C. 

Goat-thighs.    Phei.  6: 126.    C.878. 
Goat's-hair.     R.&B.  3:462.     C. 
595.     13. 

Iim  A.  5 :  303.     C.  797. 

Gobbets.    R.  «feB.3:322.    C.541. 


INDEX 
God. 


33- 


C. 


Goblin-time.    R.  &  B.  3:31. 

426.     87. 
Goblin-shred.      R.    &  B.    3:209. 

C.  497. 
God.    Pan.  1:2.     C.  2.    228. 

Pan.  1 :  12.     C.  (i.     250. 

Pau.l:19.     C.  9.     5. 

Pan.  1 :  24.     C.  11.     47- 

Pau.  1 :  25.     C.  11.     16. 

Para.   1 :  ;>4.      C,   15.      30. 

278. 

369 


God 
Para.   1 :  .35.     C.   15.     226. 

■Para.  1:50.     C.  21.     194- 
Para.    1:52.      C.   22.      96. 

204. 
Para.  1 :  58.     C.  24.     206. 
Para.  1 :  73.     C.  .30.     278. 
Para.  1 :  107.     C.  43.     188. 
Para.  1:119.     C.  47.     36. 
Straf.  1:181.     C.  69.     171. 
Sor.  1:286.     C.  111.     222. 
Pippa,  1 :  3.31.    C.  130.    285. 
Pippa,  1 :  :346.    C  136.    227. 
Pippa,  1:354.    C.139.    285. 
King   V.   1:384.      C.   151. 

23. 
King  C.   1:393.       C.   155. 

52. 
Evelyn,  2:24.  C.  171.    143. 
Old  Pict.  2 :  .38.  C.  17().    6g. 
Saul,  2 :  4S.     C.  180.     75. 
Before,  2 :  .S6.    C.  193.    223. 
Druses,     2:107.       C.     201. 

243 


A    Blot,   2:173. 

C. 

228. 

285. 

Count   G.   2:235. 

C. 

252. 

Gram.  Fun.  2 :  312. 

C.  280. 

218. 

Her.  Trag.  2 :  316. 

C 

281. 

142. 

Holy-C.   2:318. 

V. 

282. 

224. 

Soul's  Tr.  2:338. 

c. 

289. 

261. 

Soul's  Tr.  2 :  343. 

a 

291. 

260. 

Soul's  Tr.  2 :  356. 

c. 

297. 

R.&B.  3: 2.5.     C.424. 

II. 

R.&B. 3: 191.  C.490. 

IQS. 

R.   &  B.   3:212. 

c. 

498. 

214. 

R.  &   B.  3:215. 

c. 

5e)0. 

73- 

R.   &  B.  3:222. 

c. 

503. 

236. 

R.  &  B.  3:229. 

c. 

mi. 

262. 

R.   &  B.   3:235. 

c. 

509. 

31. 

R.   &  B.   3:243. 

c. 

511. 

187. 

R.  &  B.   3:252. 

V. 

514. 

286. 

R.   &   B.  3:252. 

c. 

515. 

132. 

God  INDEX 


God-hated 


God.    R.   &  B,  3:256.     C.  516. 

39- 
R.   <fe  B.  3:258.     C.  517. 

86. 
R.  &  B.  3:260.      C.  518. 

48. 
E.    &    B.   3:261.     C.  518. 

105.     108. 
R.    &    B.  3:266.     C.  520. 

260. 
R.   &  B.   3:269.     C.  521. 

196. 
R.   &   B.  3:270.     C.  521. 

278. 
R.   &   B.  3:270.     C.  522. 

260. 
R.   &  B.  3:273.      C.  523. 

286. 

R.  &B.3:275.     C.524.    7. 

R.   &  B.  3:276.     C.  524. 

159. 
R.   &   B.   3:277.      C.  524. 

281. 
R.   &  B.  3:278.      C.  523. 

209. 
R.   &  B.  3:362.      C.  556. 

2.     123. 
R.   &  B.  3:378.      C.  562. 

81. 
R.   &  B.  3:382.     C.  564. 

28. 
R.   &  B.  3:393.     C.  568. 

287. 
R.   &  B.  3:403.     C.  572. 

239. 
R.   &  B.   3:434.     C.  585, 

80.     218. 
R.   &  B.  3:456.      C.  593. 

191. 
Chris-Eve,  4:12.     C.  320, 

145- 
Chiis.-Eve,  4:17.     C.  322. 

175. 
Chris.-Eve,  4:27.     C.  325. 

273. 

Karsh.  4 :  68.    C.  340.    140. 

Fra  Lippo,  4 :  80.      C  344. 

285. 
Andrea,     4 :  86.       C.     347. 

36. 
St.   Prax.   4:90.       C.   349. 

157- 
In  a  B.  4:144.       C.  369. 

I.     227. 
J.    Lee,    4 :  156.      C.    374. 

M5- 
Ben  Ezra,  4 :  187.     C.  384. 

154- 


God.     Ben  Ezra,  4:189.     C.  385. 

287. 
Ben  Ezra,  4:190.     C.  385. 

246. 
Death  in  D.  4 :  201.     C.  389. 

29. 
Prospice,   4  :  216.      C.   395. 

34- 
Prince  H.  4 :  338.     C.  685. 

23. 
Prince  H.  4:358.     C.  692. 

245. 
Prince  H.  4:374.     C.  690. 

218. 

Inn  A.  5:  276.    C.  786.    243. 

Inn  A.  5 :  287.     C.  791.     84. 

Inn  A.  5 :  2!t(>.    C  794.    217. 

Fears,  5 :  345.     C.  811.     86. 

Cenciaja,   5:370,      C.  822, 

43- 

La  S.  6 :  68,     C.  855,     48. 

La  S.  6 :  75.     C.  858.     233. 

Two  Poets,  6 :  90.     C.  864. 

249. 

Clive,  6 :  160.     C.  895.     129. 

Pietro,  6 :  174.    C.9(32,    175. 

Ixion,6:207.     C.916,    207. 

Family,    6:246,       C,   932, 

287. 
Camei-D.   6:259.      C.  937. 

PiUar,  6:270.    C.  941.    127. 

Fust,  6  :  378.     C.  984.     264. 

Ben   K.   6  :  385.       C.    372. 

210. 
Prol.   A.   6  :  390 ;  7:3.      C. 

987.     170. 


God-abandoned.     R.  &  B.  3:376. 

0.562. 
God-counselled.    Ger.  de  L.  6 :  343. 

C.  970. 
God -exercise.    Ari.  A.  5 :  102.     C. 

629. 
God-function.      Chris.-Eve,  4  :  24. 

C.  324. 
God-gift.     Bea.  Sig.  6 :  412  ;  7 :  58. 

c.  m;.   89. 

God-glance.    R.  &  B.  3:50.     C. 

548.     8. 
God-glimpse.     R.  &  B.  3: 14,     C. 

God-grace,    Ari.    A.    5:133.     C. 

(i42. 
God-grand.    Ari.    A.    5:138.     C. 

643. 
God-guided.     Why,    6:388.      C. 

94H.     78. 
God-hated,    Agara.6:32.    C.  842. 
370 


God-involving 


INDEX 


Gold-daubed 


God-involving.    Agam.  6 :  34.     C. 

843. 
God-led.    Agam.  6:39,     C.  844. 
God-possessed.    Agam.  6 :  34.     C 

843. 
God-sent.     Agam.  6:  Ifi.     C.  S3(). 
God's.     Para.  1:45.     C.  111.     163. 

Para.  1 :  48.     C.  20.     221. 

Para.  1 :  G4.     C.  2().     258. 

Para.  1 :  73.     C.  30,     278. 

Para.  1 :  75.     C.  30.     34. 

Para.  1 :  99.     C.  39.     24. 

Para.  1 :  114.     C.  45.     6. 

Para.  1 :  122.     C.  48,     128. 

Sor.  1 :  232,     C.  90,     8. 

Sor.  1 :  297.     C,  116,     278. 

Pippa,  1:331.     C.130.  143. 

Pippa,  1:337.    C.  132.    160. 

Pippa,  1 :  357.     C.  141.     76. 

Eveljni,  2 :  24.    C.  171.    loi. 

Saul,  2:56.     C.   183.     143. 

174. 
Boy  &  Ang.  2 :  239.     C.  254. 

278. 
Gram.  Fun.  2 :  312.     C.  280. 

249. 
Her.  Trag.  2 :  315.     C.  281. 

159. 

Luria,  2 :  391.     C.  311.     91 . 

Lm-ia,  2 :  401.     C.  314.     54. 

Luria,  2:  402.     C.  315.   160. 

Luria,  2 :  404.     C.  315.  164. 

R.   &  B.  3:174.     C.    483. 

142. 
R.   &  B.  3:278.     C    525. 

273- 

R.&B.  3:320.     C.  540.    6. 

R.   &    B.  3:374.     C,  560. 

251- 
R.   &    B.  3:399.     C.  571. 

258. 
R.    &  B.   3:470,      C,   598, 

187, 
R.   &  B.   3:471.     C.   599. 

29. 
Chris.-Eve,   4:27,     C.  32,5. 

27. 
Eas.-Day,    4:37.     C.    328. 

23. 
Fra  Lippo,  4:80.     C.   345. 

179. 

Andrea,  4:  84.    C.  346.  137. 

Death  in  D.  4 :  203.         C. 

390.     154. 
Death  in  D.  4 :  204.     C.391. 

197- 
Prince  H.  4:337.     C.  684. 

17- 

3 


God's.    Prince  H.  4:365.     C.  695. 

214. 

La  S.  6:  64.     C.  854.     185. 

Two  Poets,  6 :  77.     C.  859. 

70. 
Epil.  Fer.  6 :  283.     C.   946. 

35- 

Which,    6:401;  7:  29.      C. 

991.     147. 
God's-gift.    R.   &  B.   3:177.     C. 

485.     37. 
Gods.    R.  &  B.  3:447.     C.  590. 

176. 
Goddess-sent.    AdoI.  &  F.  6 :  286. 

C.  948. 

Godlike.     Pietro,  6 :  169.     C.  (tOO. 
98. 
Ixion,  6:208.     C.  917.    1 54. 


Goggle-eye.  Shop,  5:338.  C.  809. 
Going-iu.  Ari.  A.  5 :  198.  C.  666. 
Goiug-out.     Ari.    A.  5:198.      C. 

666, 
Gold,      Parting,    2:21,      C.    170. 

245- 
Master  H.   2:95.     C.   197. 

94. 

Glove,  2  :  249.     C.  257.  236. 

Childe  R.  2 :  333.     C.  287, 

44- 

Liuia,  2  :  381,     C.  .307,     22, 

R,  &B.  3:1.     C.  414. 

R.    &    B.   3:11.     C.    418. 

261. 

R.  «S:  B.  3:  12.     C.  419.  80. 

R.   &    B.    3:16.     C.    421. 

261. 

R.  <fe  B.  3 :  43.     C.  431.    13. 

R.    &    B.    3:77.     C.    444. 

205. 
R.   &  B.  3:311.     C.   537. 

213. 
R.   &   B.   3  :  312.     C.  538. 

no. 
R.   &   B.    3:332.     C.   545. 

99. 
R.   &   B.  3:368.     C.   558. 

165. 
R.   &  B.  3 :  470.     C.   598. 

23. 
Red    Cott.  5:43.     C.   752. 

10. 
Ari.  A.  5  :  177.     C.  659.  89. 


Gold-besprinkled.      Agam.    6  :  24. 

C.  839. 
Gold-crowned.      Waring,     2 :  272. 

C.  265. 
Gold-daubed.     Inn  A.  5  :  248.     C. 


71 


Gold-exchanger 


IXDEX 


Goose-yard 


Gold-exchanger.    Agam.  6 :  15.  C. 

am. 

GokH'arnished.      Ari.   A.   5:190. 

C.  fM. 
Gold-glorious.    Agam.    6:11.     C. 

HPA. 
Gold-graved.    Ari.  A.  5  :  240.     C. 

681. 
Gold-interspersed.      Mesmer.     2 : 

24(i.     C.  25t;. 
Gold-like.      Gold  H.  4  :  169.     C. 

.•57«.     192. 
Gold-meal.     Sor.  1  :  254.     C.  98. 
Gold-red.     Don.    6:197.     C.    912. 

237- 
Gold-rimmed.    Ber.  de  M.  6 :  296. 

C.  952. 
Gold-robed.    Popul.  2  :  91.    C.  195. 
Gold-roofed.     Epil.  Eagle,  6 :  241. 

C.  9m.     223. 
Gold-rough.     Sor.  1 :  287.     C.  112. 
Gold-sparkling.     Sor.    1 :  -315.      C. 

123. 
Golden.    A  Blot,  2 :  150.     C.  219. 

108. 
Chris.-Eve,   4:11.     C.  320. 

122 

Red  Cott.  5  :  15.     C.  742. 

Golden-fleeced.      Forgiv.     5 :  ii(i3. 

C.  818. 
Golden-gamLshed.     R.    &    B.   3: 

34<3.     C.  550.     151. 
Golden-haired.    R.    &   B.   3:172. 

C.  482. 
Golden-headed.    Ari.    A.    5:190. 

C.  664. 
Golden-lettered.     Doctor,     6 :  184. 

C.  iKt7.     91. 
Golden-tinted.     A    Blot,    2:153. 

C.  220. 
Goldsmith-business.       Red    Cott. 

5  :  18.     C.  743. 
Gone.     Pau.  1 :  12.     C.  6.     250. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  164.  C.  480.  277. 

Good.  Pau.  1 :  12.     C  6.     250. 

Para.  1 :  39.     C.  17.     249. 

Para.  1 :  45.     C.  19.     163. 

Para.  1 :  121.     C.  48.     102. 

King  C  1 :  393.    C.  155.   80. 

Saul,  2 :  49.     C.  180.     136. 

Luria,2:365.    C.  300.     177. 

Luria,  2 :  400.    C.  314.    273. 

R.&B.3:17.    C.421.    153. 

R.&B.3:84.    C.  447.   207. 

R.&B.3:112.  C.45S.  loi. 

R.  &B.3:229.    C.  5f«.   58. 

R.&B.3:231.  C.rm.  275. 

R.&B.3:235.  C.  508.  259. 


Good.  R.«S:B.3:297.  C.5.32.  115. 

R.  &B.3:472.    C.  5!«.    98. 

Eas.-Day,  4 :  51.  C.  333.   13. 

InaB.4:i;:H.     C.  3(i5.     70. 

Fifine,  4:  3f»4.    C.  708.    263. 

Red  Cott.  5:92.     C.   771. 

II. 

Ari.  A.  5: 109.    C.632.    154. 

Epil.    Family,    6:248.      C. 

9:i3. 
Geo.  B.  D.  6:  321.     C.  962. 

67. 

Fr.  Fu.  6 :  339.     C.  969.     8. 

Rev.  6 :  436 ;  7 :  105,  C.  1005. 

117. 
Good-and-faithful-servant.       Two 

Cam.  6:261.     C.  938. 
Good-companion.      Fifine,    4 :  442. 

a  7;i5. 

Good-for-nothing.    Ari.  A.  5 :  221. 

C.  673. 
Good-hand.    R.&B.  3:405.     C. 

572. 
Good-man.    R.  &  B.  3  :  326.     C. 

543. 
Good-news-annoxmcer.    Agam.  6: 

10.     C.  834. 
Good-nosed.      Agam.  6 :  32.      C. 

842. 
Good-omened.      Agam.    6:4.      C. 

831. 
Good-tempered.    Red  Cott.  5 :  73. 

C.  7(i4. 
Good-wUl.    Sor.  1 :  276.     C.  107. 
Good-wisher.    Balau.  4:291.     C. 

613. 
Good's.    Rev.  6:438;   7:110,     C. 

100)  i.     192. 
Goodness.    Para.  1 :  80.    C.  32.    19, 

Waring,    3:271,       C.    265. 

267. 

Inn  A.  5:  289,    C.  791.   243. 

Goose.     R.&B.  3:153,     C.  475, 
no. 

R.&B.  3:  302.  C.534.  130. 

Inn  A.  5:251.    C.  776.    115. 

Goose-flesh.    R.  &  B.  3:285.     C. 

527. 
Goose-foot.    R.  &  B.  3:282.     C. 

526.     130. 
Goose-quill.     R.  &  B.  3:210.     C. 

498. 
Goose-thoughts.      Pietro,    6 :  170. 

C.  im.     247. 
Goose-wont.      Pacch.   5 :  331.      C 

807. 
Goose-yard.    R.  &  B.  3 :  430.     C 

583,    36, 


372 


Gor-cro-w 


R.  &  B.  3:369. 


Gor-crow 

558. 
Gore-glutted.     Ger.  de  L.  G :  347. 

C.  972. 
Gorge-and-swill.      Two    Cam.    6: 

2(i0.     C.  937. 
Gorgon.     R.  &  B.  3 :  415.     C.  577. 

Gormandizer  -  spendthrift  -  drama  - 

tist.     Ari.  A.  5 :  121.     C.  G37. 
Gospel-grace.    R.&B.3:412.     C. 

576.     130. 
Gospel-news.     La   S.   6 :  73.      C. 

858. 
Gospel-side.     R.  &  B.  3:436.     C. 

5S5.     50. 
Gossip-guess,    R.  &  B,  3:  21.     C. 

423.     109. 
Gossips.    R.  &  B.  3 :  272.     C  522. 
Gossipry.    R.  &  B.  3 :  362.     C  556. 

201. 
Got.     R.   &  B.  3:421.     C.  579. 

88. 
Gourd-like.    Sor.  1 :  289.     C.  112. 
Gourd-vine.      Flight,    2:303.      C. 

276. 
Governance.     R.  &  B.  3:52.     C. 

435. 
Governor.    R.   &  B.  3:461.      C. 

595. 
Grace.     J.  Lee,  4:  163.     C.  376. 
60. 

Fifine,4:391.    0.706.    242. 

Inn  A.  5:  257.    C.  779.    240. 

Sun,  6 :  250.     C.  933.     90. 

Rosny,6:390;7:4.     0.987. 

215- 

Bad  D.  II.  6:  398;  7: 19.    C. 

990.     140. 
Grace-charm.     Agani.  6 :  50.     C 

848. 
Grace-like.   Balau.  4:271.    C.  605. 
Graced-before.     Red   Cott.  5 :  13, 

C.  741. 
Gracefullest.    Sor.  1 :  199.     C.  11. 
Grafts.     Prince  H.  4 :  375.     C.  699. 

67. 
Grain.    R.  &  B.  3:447.     C.  590. 
137. 

^  Ari.  A.  5: 155.    C.650.  209. 

Grain-crop.     Red  Cott.  5:5.      C. 

738. 
Grandees.     R.  cfe  B,  3 :  43.     C.  431. 

Grandson-prodigy.     Prince   H.   4: 

376.     C.  699. 
Granite.    Red  Cott.  5:2.     C.  737. 

286. 


INDEX 
C. 


Grave 


Granite.     Ger.  de  L.   6  :  348,     C. 

972.     166. 
Granite-«eani.     Chris.-Eve,  4:30. 

C.  326. 
Grant.      Evelyn,    2:24.      C.   171. 

143. 
Granted.    Family,  6 :  248.     C.  933. 

49. 
Grape-blush.     Ari.  A.  5:115.     C. 

635. 
Grape-bunch.     Fra  Lippo,   4:76. 

(1343. 
Grape-bundles.     Saul,   2 :  50.      C. 

181. 
Grape-gleaners.    Englishm.  2  :  259. 

C.  260. 
Grape-harvest.     Englishm.  2  :  258. 

C.  mo. 

Grape-juice.  Sor.  1 :  212.  C.  82. 
Grape-time.  Sor.  1 :  202.  C.  78. 
Grape-trees.      Before,   2 :  86.      C. 

193.  _ 
Grappling-iron.    R.  &  B.   3:405. 

C:573. 
Grasp.     Para.  1 :  57.     C.  24.     196. 
Graspable.     R.   &   B.   3:29.      C. 

426. 
Grasped.     Old  Pict.  2  :  42.     C.177. 

32. 
Grass.      Pippa,    1:332.      C.    130. 

186. 
Grass-banks.     Para.  1 :  77.     C.  31. 
Grass-blade's.     Ger.  de  L.  G :  348. 

C.  972. 
Grass-fed.     Agam.  6  :  35.     C.  843. 
Grass-green.    Joch.6:229.    C.926. 

267. 
Grass-patch.     Saul,  2  :  47.     C.  179. 
Grass-path.     La  S.  6 :  55.     C.  850. 
Grass-pillowed.    Inn  A.  5:  297.    C. 

795. 
Grass-spring.     Sor.  1  :  240.     C.  93. 
Grass-stalk.    R.  &  B.  3 :  424.     C. 

581. 
Grass-walk.    R.  &  B.  3:14.     C. 

420. 
Grasses.     Two  in  C.  2:  71.     C.  189. 

28. 
Gratify.    R.&B.  3:437.     C.  586. 

98. 
Gratitude.    Fifine,4:421.    C.723. 
78. 

Pillar,  6 :  269.    C.941.    147. 

Gravamen.      Instans,   2 :  242.      C. 

255. 
Grave.     Pan.  1 :  2.     C.  3.     181. 

Straf .  1 :  138.     C.  53.     27. 

R.&B.  3: 192.   C.  490.   96. 


373 


Grave 


INDEX 


Grope 


Grave.  Cleon,4:118.    C.  a^O.  247. 

Worst,  4: 171.    C.  37!l.    283. 

Fifine,  4 :  399.     C.  711.     69. 

La  8.  (> :  65.     C.  854.    49- 

Ber.  de  M.  6:  295.     C.  952. 

Grave-clothes.    Old  Pict.  2 :  43.    C. 

178.  ^^       ^ 

Grave-kindly.     Phei.   6:126.      L. 

878. 
Grave-ward.     Balau.   4:276.      C. 

(;o7.  ^  „  „ 

Graves.     FraLippo,4: 81.    C.34o. 

152. 
Gravel-walks.      Red    Cott.   5:16. 

C.  742.     97- 
Gray.    R.&B.3:86.  C.448.   276. 
Gray  -  garmenting.      Ger.    de    L. 

6 :  349.     C.  973. 
Gray-grown.    Sor.  1 :  264.     C  103. 
Gray-haired.    Sor.  1 :  245,     C.  95. 

162. 
Gray -headed.     R.   &  B.  3:423. 

C.  580. 
Gray-streaked.     Sor.   1:202.      C. 

78. 
Grayer-hearted.    R.  &  B.  3:423. 

C.  580. 
Graze-flocks.     Agam.   6:44.      C. 

846.  „      ri 

Grease-pot's.    An.  A.  a-.lt  t.     C 

659. 
Great.     Para.  1 :  57.     C.  24.    254. 

Para.  1 :  119.     C.  47.     41- 

Straf.  1 :  163.     C.  62.     164. 

Straf.  1 :  191.     C.  73.    223. 

Sor.  1 :  318.     C.  124.     236. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  89.     C.  449.    38. 

R.    &   B.   3:337.      C.  547. 

223. 
R.  &  B.  3:394.      C.  568. 

128. 
Prince  H.  4:366.     C.  695. 

90. 

Fiiine,4:395.     C.  708.     20. 

Red    Cott.    5:5.      C.  738. 

22 

Ivkn'.6:131.     C.  881.     185. 

Great-hearted.    Straf.  1:131.     C 

50.     89. 

Marching.  2:2.     C.  163. 

Greatens.    Soul's   Tr.  2:340.     C. 

290.    272. 
J.    Lee,    4:156.      C.    374. 

145- 
Greater.    R.&B.3:193.     C.  491, 


32. 


Greatish-small.     Bea.  Sig.  6 :  412  ; 
7 :  57.     C.  996. 


Greatlv-intending.     Agam.  6:44. 

C.  84(3. 
Greatness.      Ari.   A.    5  : 1.31.      C. 

641.     203. 
Greaved-thigh.     Phei.  6:127.     C. 

Greediness.     Inn  A.   5:258.      C. 

779. 
Greedy.    Gram.  Fun.  2:312.     C. 

280.     197.  ^ 

Greek.     Dev.   6:428;    7:89.      C. 

1002.     76. 
Greek    Plays.      Mary  W.   6:206. 

C.  916.     195-  „ 

Greek-nymph.     Fifine,  4 :  388.     C. 

704. 
Greek-sculpture-haffling.    Inn  A. 

5  :  277.     C.  787. 
Greeley's.      Sludge,    4:223.      C. 

398.  _, 

Green-dense.    Caliban,  4 :  208,    C. 

392. 
Green-flesh.    De  Gus.  2:45.     C. 

178. 
Green  -  glazed.     Sor.  1:237.      0. 

92. 
Green-glowing.    Ivkn,  6:134.     (7, 

SS2. 
Greenish-golden.     R.  &  B.  3:  409. 

C.  574. 
Grenadier-like.  Two  Poets,  6: 106. 

C.  870. 
Grfeve.    Herv^,  5:356.     C.  816. 
Grew.    Sor.  1:266.     C.  103.     184, 
Griding.    Sor.  1 :  195.     C.  75. 
Grief.    Old  Pict.  2:40.     C.  177. 

Gnef-free,  Agam.  6:26.  C.  840. 
GriesUest.  Sor.  1: 199.  C.  77.  I73- 
Griffin-guarded.    R.  &  B.  3: 149. 

C.  473. 
Grimace.     Childe  R.  2 :  332.     C. 

287.     184. 
Grimmest.     R.    &   B.   3:43.      C. 

431.     242. 
Grin.    R.  &  B.  3:279.     C.  525. 

121. 
Grinned.    Doctor,  6 :  187.     0.908. 

Gnsard.    Pietro,  6 :  168.     C.  899 
Grisi's.    Youth  &  A.  4:217.    C. 

396 
Groan.     La    S.    6:65.      C.    854. 

248. 
Groan -like.    Druses,   2:124.      C. 

208. 
Grope.     R.  &  B.  3:242.     C.  510. 

87. 


374 


Grotto-depths 


Grotto-depths.    Iv^n,  6 :  133 

.SS2. 
Ground.       Para.    1:69.       C.    28. 

244. 
Ground-prop.     Agam.   0 :  2G.      C. 

840. 
Groundedly.    R.  &  B.  3:  423.     C. 

r>si.    51. 

Groundlings.      La    S,    6:61.      C. 

852.     192. 
Groundward.    Andrea,  4  :  84.     C. 

34(). 
Prince  H.  4:372.     C.  698. 

74- 
Groimdward-falling.    Agam.  6 :  27. 

C.  840. 
Grovel.      La    S.    6:G1,      C.   852. 

192. 
Grow.     R.  &  B.  3:243.     C.  511. 

187. 

Fifine,4:413.    0.719.    282. 

Grows.     Luria,  2:401.      C.   314. 

236. 
R.   &  B.  3:387.      C.  560. 

165. 
Epil.    Dra.   P.   4:262.      C. 

414.     70. 
Growl.    R.  &  B.  3:109.     C.  457. 

276. 
Growth.    R.  &  B.  3: 17.     C.  421. 

153. 
Ber.  de  M.  6 :  295.     C.  952. 

77- 
Grubbed.    Fr.  Fu.6:332.     C.  966. 

II. 
Guardian.    R.  &B.3:95.     C.  451. 
213. 

Red   Cott.    5:5.      C.    738. 

172. 
Guardian  -  club.     Ari.  A.  5 :  192. 

C.  6G5. 
GueK.    Sor.  1:196.     0.76, 

Stat.  &  B.  2 :  328.     C.  286. 

26. 
Guendolen,  Lady.    A  Blot,  2 :  146. 

C.  217. 
Guereino.    Guard.  Ang.  2 :  89.    C. 

194. 
Guerdon.    Old  Pict.  2:41.    C.177. 
45. 

Pietro,6:179.    C.905.    125. 

Guessed.     R.  «fe  B.  3 :  374,     C.  560. 


INDEX  Gyres 

C.    Guibert.      Colombe,    2:181.       C. 


217. 


C, 


Guest-captive,    Agam,  6:26 

840. 

Guest-hall.    Agam.  6 :  10.     C.  834. 
Guests.     R.  &  B.  3 :  104,     C.  455. 

240. 


Guibert. 

231. 
Guide,     Fifine,   4:413.      C.    719. 

155- 
Guides.    Para.  1:40.     C.  17.    9. 

R.   &   B.  3:229.     C.  505. 

83. 

Balau.4:295.    C.614.    280, 

Guided.     R.  &  B.  3:  85,     C.  447, 

184. 
Guiding-staff.    R.&B.3:395.    C. 

509. 
Guido  Franceschini.    R.  &  B.  3 :  4. 

C.  415. 
Guido  Reni,    One  Word,   4:124, 

C.  302. 
Guile.     King  V,  1:373,      C.  147, 
68. 

King  C.  1:397.     0.156.    3. 

Fifine,  4 :  426.     C.  720.     4. 

Geo.  B.  D.  6:  325.     C.  %3. 

59. 
GuUe's.    Geo.   B.   D.  6:325,     C. 

963.     133. 
Guilt.     Para.  1 :  98.     C.  39.     206. 

R.    &   B.   3:189.      C.   489. 

291. 

R.   &   B.  3:332.     C.   545. 

78. 

R.   &   B.  3:142,     C.  471. 

194. 
Guiltiness.    R.  &B.3:58.    C.437, 

118. 
Guilty.    R.  &  B.  3: 139.     C.  470. 
219. 

R.   &   B.   3:18.5.     C.  488. 

199. 
Guitar-strings.     R.   &   B.  3:401. 

C.  bTl. 
Gullet's-gripe.    Fra  Lippo,  4 :  74. 

C.  342. 
Gully-hole.    R.    &   B.  3:81.      C. 

446.     79. 
Gulp.    R.   &  B.  3:100.     C.  454. 

52- 
Gust.    R.   &  B.  3:344.     C.  549. 

247. 
Ari.    A.    5:108.       C.   632. 

237- 
Guttles.    Ponte   A.  6 :  408  ;  7 :  49. 

a  994. 
Guzzles.    Ponte  A.  6:408;  7:49. 

C.  994. 
Gypsy.     Flight,   2:297.      C.  274. 

91. 
Gypsy -troop.     Ivkn,  6:138.     C 

884. 
Gyres.    Sor.  1 :  324.     C.  127. 


375 


Habergeon 


INDEX 


Half-forgotten 


Habergeon.     Tray,  6: 142.  C.  887. 
Habitude.    R.&B.3:384.    C.5W. 

21. 

Hack-block.    R.  &  B.  3:  316.     C. 

539.     122. 
Hacked.    R.  &  B.  3:  65.     C.  440. 

237- 
Hackney.    R.&B.3:128.    0.465. 

213. 
Hacqueton.    Sor.  1 :  290.     C.  113, 
Haendel.    R.  &  B.  3:  28.     C.  425. 
Hag.     Pau.  1:23.     C.  10.     281. 
Haggard-cheeked.     Stat.  &  B.  2: 

32(j.     C.  285. 
Haides-bound.    Ari.A.5:221.    C. 

674. 
Haides-drunk.    Ari.A.5:213.    C. 

671. 
Hailstone-beaten.    Waring,  2 :  272. 

C.  265. 
Hair.    King  V.   1:373.      C.    147. 
68. 

Up  —  Down,  2 :  32.     C.  174. 

Porph.2:329.    C.  286.   241. 

Childe  R.  2:332.     C.  287. 

97- 

R.&B.3:31.     C.426.     12. 

In  a  B.  4: 142.    C.  368.    123. 

Hair-heaps.     Gold  H.  4 :  168.     C. 


R.  &  B.  3:241. 

Mesmer.  2:243. 

R.&B.3:164. 


Hair-knot. 

510. 
Haii^plait's. 

255. 
Hair-powder. 

479. 
Hair-stifEening.     Para.   1 :  83. 

.33. 
Hair-swathes,     Inn  A.  5:  278. 

787, 
Hair's-breadth,  One  Word,  4 :  128. 

C.  363. 
Hairs.   Cleon,4:122.    C.361.   289. 
Hairbreadth-deep.     Inn  A,  5 :  252. 

a  Til. 

Hakeem,  Druses,  2 :  98,  C.  197. 
Halaphta,  Joch.  6:233.  C.  927. 
Halbert.    Hal.  &  Hob,  6: 128,    C. 

879. 
Halcyon.     R.&B,  3:455.    C.  593. 

183. 
Half.    R.   &   B.   3:211.     C.  498. 

44- 

Ben  Ezra,  4 :  185,     C.  383, 

2gi, 


Half-a-dozen,    R.&B,  3: 296.    C, 

5:;2. 
Half-a-hundred.     Imp,    Aug.    0: 

426;  7:84.     C.  1001. 
Half-a-mile.    R.  &  B.  3:71,     C. 

442. 
Half-and-halfs.      Shidge,    4:235, 

C.  4()3. 
Half-asleep.     Love,  2:25.     C.171, 

Flower's,  2:  9.    C.  166.    235. 

Half-attaining.   Fr.Fu.  6:338.    C. 

969. 
Half-attar-gul.     £pil.    Pacch,   5: 

?fM).     C.  828. 
Half -awake.    Flower's,    2:9.     C. 

166.     235. 
Half-beHeve.    Red  Cott.  5 :  83.   C. 

767. 
Half-blind.     Straf .  1 :  173.     C.  67. 
Half-borne-out.    Straf.  1 :  171,    C. 

68,     109. 
Half-brandy.     EpU.  Pacch.  5 :  390, 

C.  828. 
HaK-break.    Eas.-Day,  4: 52.     C. 

334. 
Half-bumed-out.     R.  &  B.  3:  17. 

C.  421, 
Half-burnt.    Sor.  1 :  201.     C.  78. 
Half-chime.     How,  2:4.     C.  165. 
Half -descried.     Imp.  Aug.  0:  428 ; 

7  :  SS.     C.  1002. 
Half-devoured.     R.  &  B.   3:297. 

C.  532. 
Half-dispersed.    Balau.4:310.    C. 

620. 
Half-doing.     Ari.   A.   5:227,     C, 

67(i. 
Half-done.    Sor.   1:312.     C.  122. 
Half-dozen-hours'.      R.    &   B,   3: 

172.     C.  483. 
Half-drunk.     R.  &  B.  3:  421,     C. 

579. 
Half-efFacement.      Luria,    2 :  370. 

C.  302. 
Half-emperors.    Protus,  2 :  320.    C. 

283. 
Half -enlightened.      Para.     1 :  117. 

C.  46.     142. 
Half-experience.   Prince  H.  4 :  378. 

C.  700. 
Half -fierce.     Fifine,    4:388,      C. 

704. 
Half-flush.  My  Last  D.  2:  233.    C. 

252 
Haif-foolish,    King  C,  1 :  401.     V. 

158. 
Half -forgotten.    R.  &  B.  3:376, 

a  561, 


376 


Half-formed 


INDEX 


Halo-girt 


Half- formed.     A  Blot   ''•iftr!      r»  i  rr  ir  ^ 

225.  -«■  i>iot,  ^ .  !(,(,.     C.    Half-reasons.      Para.   1:121.      C. 

Half-frank.      Fifine,    4- '««       r     tt  if       •.  ,      ^ 

704.  ™''''    *-^^^^'^-      (7.    Ilalf-reeital.     Sor.  1 :  .302.     C  118 

Half-frightened.     Para.  1 :  29.     C.    ^^/™'^'^»bered.    Ari.  A.  5 :  Itil! 
Half-grotsque.     R.  &  B.  3 -207    ^4?,^^""^-     ^-    *  ^-  3:20.     C. 


a  520.     219. 

n'f^u^^^^'K  Key.  6:  435 ;  7: 103 
t^.  KtO;).     204. 

Half-liealed.    Red  Cott.  5 :  65.    C. 

H^|f-i»eart's.    Inn  A.  5:294.     C. 
794. 

Half-helot.     Ari.   A    5  •  2*?T       r- 
679.  ■  ^• 

Half-hidden.     Waring,  2 :  275.    C. 

Half -hour.    Red  Cott.  5:49      C 
tiio.     255.  ■        • 

^^^■;i"?tructed.    Prince  H.  4 :  353. 

Half-knowledge.     Red  Cott.  5 :  28 
^.  /4(). 

Half-lights,    R.&B.  3:291.     C. 
Hajf-iived.     Pan.  1 :  5.     C.  4 


^alfr^ad.     Prince  H.  4:367.     C. 
Half-said.     Bishop  B.  4:92.     C. 

''f406;T44'''^(^:994^'^   ^^^^' 

Half-shut.    R.   &  B.  3:346.     C. 

Half-slain.    R.   &  B.  3;  148      C 

473.  '        *     ^' 

Half-sleep.      Red   Cott.   5:6.     C. 
^^!f-«oftened.     Pippa,  l :  345.     c. 

^')i^t*f/PPed.    Fra  Lippo,  4:76 
O.  o4o.  * 


Half-look.     In  a  B  4-1 40      r  ^Ui-r     rr  Si       ', 

156.  "<t^.a.l4U.     C.  367.    Half -sunk.    Earth's  Im.  2 :  20.    C 

Half-made.    Prince  H  4  •3.33     r  Inllr'     ^°^'       t. 
683.  i-e  n.  4.  c,33.    C.    Hiilf-snrmise.    Ber.  de  M.  6:  301. 

Half-men.    Andrea  4 -Sfi     n -wr     u  li  .     , 

Half-mile.    R.   &   fe  '  s^jV" '^^;;-  P;*^  f:«"r™sed.    Baku.  4:  298.    C. 

510.    87  '  '^■''^-    ^-  L,*^v'^- 

Half-month.    Sor.  1 :  310.     C  l^l         i7s*^'^-     ^Id  Pict.   2 :  44.      C. 

Half -moon.    R.   &  B    S-W     A'    tr  iV'     1 

425.     204  '^•^•^-     C-.    Half-umlerstood.    J.  Lee,  4:154. 

Hal^mSS'Strof^f5?5.^ar;i"3"c^938^^    ^"*^  C^'"" 
Hal^™oon-wise.     By  Fire.  2:61.  r'Si^'t.     ^^  *  ^^  ^=^-«-      C". 

Half-naiiies.     Sor.  1 :  298      (7  116    T    ?"""®''^'^-     ^^ra.  1:119.      C. 
Half-ominous.    R.&B  3- W     r   \ -aie    -mi        ^ 
520.     219.  •«^^-'i--07.    C.    Haf-visihle.     Pan.  1:17.     C8 

Half-orbed.    Sor.  1:281.     C  100  olx      ^-      ^^ra.   1 :  95.      C'.k. 

Half-place.     A   Blot,   2:  m^'V.    nS&iped.    R.  &  B.  3- 114      C. 

Hal|privacy.    Red  Cott.  5 :  16.    C^    H^^ords.     Sor.  1:298.     C  116 

Half-promised.     R.  &   B.   3: 268.        «,    ^'-     ^'«»e.  "i:  415.     C.' 719.* 
C  521.  ■    TT  1  '  ■    r, 

I  iialo.    ipil.  Fer.  6 :  283.     C.  947. 


Half-purpose.     Red  Cott.  5:  8.    C 
m9.     243. 


Half-reached.    Ari.  A.  5: 161.     C. 


653 


•Fr.   Fu.   6:  332, 
216. 


C.   966. 


I  Halo-girt.    Pau.  1:8,     C.  5 
377  ^- 


Halted 


Halted.    Pan.  1:8.     C.  5.    238. 
Halting-stage.    Fr.  Fu.  6 :  33S.    C. 

(Hit).     126. 
Hamilton.    Straf .  1 : 1.31.     C.  50. 
Hampden.    Straf.  1 :  130.     C.  50. 
Hand.    Straf.  1 :  182.    C.  70.    132. 
Holy-C.   2:318.      C.   282, 

41. 

Luria,  2 :  301.     C.  .311.     91. 

Luria,  2:  402.    0.315.    285. 

R.    &    B.    3:  2.       C.    415. 

194- 

R.<kB.3:19.    C.422.    22. 

E.  &B.  3:28.    C.  425.    83. 

R.&B.3:206.    C.4'.t«.   25. 

R.   &  B.  3:338.      C.  547. 

158. 
R.  <fc  B.  3:356.      C.   554. 

58. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  426.      C.  581. 

R.&B.3:453.    C.5!i2.    86. 

Andrea,  4 :  84.  C.  U6.    137. 

Cleon,  4 :  122.    C.  361.    289. 

In  a   B.   4:135.       C.   365. 

273- 
J.    Lee,    4:155.       C.   373. 

131. 

J.  Lee,  4:162.     C.  376.    15. 

J.    Lee,    4 :  163.      C.   376. 

133- 
Prince  H.  4:  347.      C.  688. 

94- 
Ari.    A.   5  :  164.      C.  654. 

80. 
Hand-breadth.     Ber.  de  M.  6 :  302. 


INDEX  Hard 

Hand's-poxrer.    Fr.Fu.6:331,    C. 

(Hij.      178. 

Hand's-work.     Agam.  6 :  40.      C. 

845. 
Hands.    Any  Wife,  2 :  68.     C.188. 
225. 

R.   it  B.  3:76.       C.   444. 

46. 

R.   &  B.  3:416.      C.  577. 

97. 

Red   Cott.   5:10.      C.  740. 

87. 

Red  Cott.  5:71.     C.   763. 

118. 

Bad   D.   n.   6:395;    7:16. 

C.  989.     259. 
Handel.     Chas.  A.  6  :  356.    C.  975. 

25- 
Handle.    Forgiv.  5 :  365,     C.  819. 
Handsel.     R.  &  B.  3 :  37.     C.  429. 

208. 
Hanger-on.    R.  «fe  B.  3  :  420.     C. 

579. 
Hanging-face.    Holy-C.  2 :  318.    C. 

282. 
Hankering.    Para.  1 :  27.     C.  12. 

Sor.  1 :  228.     C.  88. 

Hans    of    Halberstadt.        Pietro, 

6:171.     C.  901. 
Hans'.       Prince  H.   4:356.       C. 


C.  955. 
Hand-impnlsion.   Prince  H.  4 :  336. 

C.  6S4. 
Hand-labor.      Fifine,   4:387.      C. 

704. 
Hand-propped.     Ari.   A.   5:118. 

C.  635. 
Hand  -  sprinklings.     Agam.  6 :  30. 

C.  841. 
Hand-squeeze.    Apol.  &  F.  6 :  291. 

C.  950. 
Hand-strength.     Sun,  6 :  250.     C. 

933. 
Hand-sweep.    Protns,  2: 321.     C. 

283. 
Hand -throw.     Fust,  6:378.      C. 

984. 
Hand-work.     Fr.Fu.  6:329,     C. 

965. 
Hand -write.     Two  Poets,   6:98. 

C.  867.     186. 
Hand's  -  breadth.       Li   Three   D.  I  - 

2 :  81.     C.  192.  | 

378 


6!;»2. 
Happier.     Childe  R.  2  :  333.      C. 

287.     56. 
Happiness.     King   C.   1  :  410.     C. 
162.     58. 

R.  &  B.  3:240.      C.  510. 

"3. 

R.  &   B.  3:287.      C.   528, 

85. 
Happy,     R.  &  B,  3 :  239.     C.  509. 
287. 

R.  &  B.   3:295.      C.  531. 

46. 
Worst,  4  :  173.     C.  379.     96. 
Agam.   6:  41. 


Happy  -  fortuned. 

C.  845. 
Happy-maker.    Ari.  A.  5 :  120.    C. 

637. 
Ha'p'worth.     Red  Cott.  5 :  67,     C. 

761. 
Harbor-boom.      R.   &   B.  3:  171. 

C.  4X2.     254. 
Harbor-side.     Ari.  A.  5:240,     C. 

681. 
Hard.      Flight,  2:309.      C.  279. 
285. 

Soul's  Tr.  2:346.     C,  293. 

52. 


Hard 


Hard.     E.  &  B.  3  :  100.     C.  454. 

52. 
E.  &  B.   3:39G.      C.  oG'J. 

42. 
Eas.-Day,  4  :  31.      C.   327. 

31. 
Prince  H.  4 :  353.     C.  696. 

175- 
Hard-pressed.     K.   &  B.   3  :  341. 

C.  548,     163. 
Harder.       E.   &   B.   3:289.      C. 

529.     38. 
Hardly-quite-as-ffood.     Prince  H. 

4  :  341.     C.  685. 
Hare.     E.  &  B.  3 :  126.     C.  464. 

87. 
E.   &  B.  3:433.     C.  584. 

64. 
Hare  -  slice  -  and  -  peasoup  -  season. 

Ari.  A.  5:170.     C  656. 
Harebells.     Para.  1 :  64.     C.  26. 
Harm.     E.  &  B.  3:338.     C.  547. 

116. 
Bean-St.   6 :  272.       C.   942. 

138. 
Harm's.    E.  &  B.  3 :  59.     C.  437. 

67. 
Harp-player.    Ari.  A.  5  :  171.     C 

656. 
Harp-string.      Para.   1 :  107.      C. 

43.     271. 
Harp-top.      Gondola,  2:268.      C. 

2(54. 
Harvest-tide.      E.   &  B.  3 :  291. 

C.  530.     133. 
Harvestings.      Chris.  -  Eve,   4 :  14. 

C.  321.    264. 
Haschisch-man.     Eed  Cott.  5 :  38. 

C.  750. 
Haste-thee-Luke.  Gondola,  2 :  268. 

C.  264. 
Hate.     Para.  1 :  80.     C.  32.     142. 

Para.  1 :  116.     C.  46.     217. 

Pippa,  1:331.    C.  130.    180. 

Pippa,  1 :  347.    C.  137.    280. 

Soul's  Tr.  2  :  340.     C.  290. 

205. 

E.  &   B.  3:102.      C.   454. 

207. 

E.   ct   B.  3:139.      C.  469. 

148. 

E.&B.3:231.    C.507.    53. 

-E.   &  B.   3:232.     C.  507. 

144. 

E.   &   B.   3:368.     C.   558. 

95- 
Prince  H.  4:  356.     C.  692. 

64. 


INDEX 

Hate 


Head-doubts 

C.   790. 
C.    819. 


Inn    A.  5:286 
146. 

Forfjiv.    5:  364. 

289. 

La  8.  6 :  64.     C.  853.     133. 

Ixion,  6 :  210.    C.  91 S.     195, 

Hated.      One  Word,   4  :  125.      C. 
3(52.     45. 

Hal.  &  Hob,  6  :  128.   C.  879. 

79- 
Hath.     E.    &   B.   3:29.     C.   426. 

136. 
Hatred.    Ari.  A.  5 :  100.     C.  628. 
98. 

Ari.    A.    5:235.      C.  679. 

198. 
Haiiberk-joint.      E.  &  B.  3  :  451. 

C.  591. 
Hanght.     Inn  A.  5  :  250.     C.  776. 
Haut  -  de  -  chausses.     Two  Poets, 

(3 :  107.     C.  870. 
Havana-smoke.    Eed  Cott.  5 :  37. 

C.  750. 
Haven.      Two    Poets,   6:93.      C. 

865.     185. 
Hawk-clawed.    Joch.  6:233.      C. 

927. 
Hawk-nose.      Imp.    Aug.   6:427; 

7 :  87.     C.  1002.     69. 
Hawthorne.     Sludge,  4:255.      C. 

411. 
Hawthorn  -  spray.       Lovers'    Q. 

2  :  27.     C.  172. 
Hay.     E.  &  B.  3:407.      C.  532. 

48. 
Hazel-clusters.     Sor.  1:212.      C, 

82. 
Hazel-sheath.    R.&B.3:332.    C. 

545. 
Hazelrig.    Straf.  1 :  174.     C.  67. 
He-Jew.      Fil.   Bald.   5:383.      C. 

826. 
Head.     R.  &  B.  3:115.     C.  459. 
281. 

E.   &   B.  3:308.     C.  536. 

277. 

Eed  Cott.  5:92.     C.   771. 

105. 
Two  Poets,  6 :  96.     C.  866. 

37- 

Epil.   Mihrab,    6:256.      C 

936.     81. 


Head-and-hanging-place.    R.  &  B. 

3 :  9.     C.  417. 
Head-break.     Eed  Cott.  5 :  26.     C. 

746.     105. 
Head-doubts.     Bishop  B.  4:105. 

C.  354. 
379 


Head-downward 


INDEX 


Heart-beats 


Head  -  downward.      Agam.  6:10. 

C.  k:«. 
Head-foremost.    K.   &  B.  3:180. 

C.  480. 
Head -gear.      Melon.    6:241.      C 

!I30. 
Head-i'-the-Sack.    R.  &  B.  3:  Gl. 

C.  438.     27. 
Head-Lackey.      Colombe,  2 :  199. 

C  238 
Head -like.      Luria,    2:389.      C. 

310. 
Head -piece.      Clive,   6: 157.      C 

894.     256. 
Head  -  sober.      Ivkn,    6 :  140.      C. 

88t).     154. 
Head-staggers,     Red  Cott.  5 :  38. 

C.  750. 
Head-sustainment.  Red  Cott.  5 :  7. 

C.  739. 
Head  -  tiar.      Druses,   2 :  119.      C. 

206. 
Head-top.     Prince  H.  4:363.     C. 

694. 
Head  -  work.      Prince    H.   4 :  360. 

C.  693. 
Headache.    App.  Fail.  4 :  257.     C. 

412. 
Healing.    Fr.  Fu.  6:  341.     C.  970. 

127. 
Health.    Para.  1:92.     C.37.   161. 
Healthy.    R.  &  B.  3:  81.     C.  446. 

37- 
Heap-on-heaped.    Ari.  A.  5  :  152. 

C.  649. 
Heaped-up.    R.   &  B.   3:84.     C. 

447      221 
Heapy.     Baku.  4 :  272.     C.  606. 
Hear.      Pippa,    1:350.      C.     138. 

94- 
Hears.    Childe  R.  2:  331.     C.  287. 

240. 
Heart.     Pau.  1 :  19.     C.  9.     283. 

Para.  1 :  101.     C.  4<).     82. 

Straf.  1 :  151.     C.  58.     35. 

•  King    C.    1 :  412.      C.   162. 

182. 

Love,  2  :  27.     C.  172.     20. 

Lovers' Q.  2 :  31.  C.  173.    8. 

De    Gus.    2:46.      C.    179. 

120. 
By    Fire.    2:63.      C.    186. 

22 

In  a  Y.  2:84.     0.193.     92. 

Colombe,   2:184.      C.  232. 

24. 
My  Last  D.  2 :  233.     C.  252. 

91. 


Heart.     Glove,   2  :  250.     C.    257. 

178. 
Cbikle  R.  2:331.     C.  287. 

72. 
Childe  R.   2:332.     C.  287. 

222 

Luria',  2 :  371.     C.  303. 

Luiia,  2 :  384.     C.  308.  274, 

Luria,  2 :  38<).     C.  308.  282. 

R.   &    B.    3:15.      C.  420. 

56. 
R.  &B.3:19.     C.422.    22. 

R.   &    B.   3:50.      C.  434. 

13. 
R.   &  B.  3:151.     C.  474. 

23- 
R.   &  B.  3:152.      C.  475. 

273. 
R.   &  B.  3:158.      C.  477. 

201. 

R.  &  B.  3: 199.     C.  493.   6. 

R.   &  B.  3:225.      C.  504. 

182. 
R.  &   B.   3:  271.     C.  522. 

237. 
R.   &  B.  3:277.     C.  524. 

86. 
R.   &  B.  3:424.     C.  580. 

151. 

Chris.-Eve,  4 :  31.     C.  327. 

Worst,     4:173.       C.     379. 

"3- 

Fifine,  4 :  399.     C.  711.     70. 

Fifine,     4  :  416.       C.    720. 

24. 
Ari.  A.    5  :  237.       C.  680, 

36. 
Mar.  Rel.  6:123.     C.  877. 

181. 

Ixkn,  6 :  138.     C.  885.     256. 

Pietro,6:  169.    C.  900.    102. 

Epil.  Melon-S.   6:242.     C. 

!».30.     204. 
Epil.  Shah  A.  6:246.     C. 

932.     147. 
Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  321 .     C.  962. 

28. 
BadD.1.6:  394;  7:15.    C. 

989.     150. 
Rev.    6 :  436  ;    7 :  105.      C. 

1005      2 
Heart-beats.  '  R."&  B.  3 :  250,    C, 

514.     III. 
R.   &  B.   3:407.     C.  573. 

227. 
Ari.    A.    5:239.      C.   681. 

69. 


380 


Heart-beats 


INDEX 


Heart-beats.     Geo.   B.  D.  6:319. 

C.  'J(J1.  192. 
Heart-blush.     Ger.  de   L.   6 :  348. 

C.  972. 
Heart  -  broken.     Ari.   A.   5  :  224. 

G.  G7.5. 
Heart-deeps.     La  S.  6:  58.    C.  851. 

70. 
Heart-doubts,     Bishop  B.  4 :  105. 

C.  354. 
Heart-free.      The   Confess.   2  :  17. 

C.  109, 
Heart  -  heavy.      Sor.   1 :  31(3.      C. 

123. 
Heart-palpitations.    Fifine,  4 :  397. 

C.  710. 
Heart-set.     Agam.  6:9.     C.  833. 
Heart-sick.     R.  &  B.  3:378.     C. 

5(;2.     19. 
Heart -sound.     Ivkn,   6:140.      C. 

88().     154. 
Heart  -  strings.     Para.   1 :  54.      C 

Heart -stufF.     Fifine,  4:407.      C. 

715. 
Heart-weary.     A  Blot,  2 :  178.     C. 

230. 
Heart-whole.      Sor.   1:300.      C. 

117. 
Heart  -  work.      Prince   H.   4 :  360. 

C.  693. 
Heart-^vreck.     Pau.  1 :  11.     C  6. 
Heart's.      ChUde   R.   2:333.      C. 
287.     35. 

Mary   W.   6:206.     C.   916. 

290. 
Heart's  -  blood.      Ari.   A.   5  :  131. 

C.  641.     250. 
Heart's-wiU.    Fr.  Fu.  6 :  331.     C. 

9(j5,     178. 
Hearts.     Pau.  1:21.     C.  10.     235. 

Para.  1 :  65.     C.  27.     228. 

Straf.  1:191.     C.  73.     285. 

Meeting,    2:21.       C.    170. 

271. 

Colombe,   2:222,      C.  247. 

141. 

Gondola,   2:268.      C.    264. 

240. 

R.  &B.  3:2.     0.41.5.    71. 

R.    &    B.    3:3.      C.    415. 

71- 
R.    &    B,    3:8.      C.    417. 

128. 
R.    &    B.    3:13.      C.   419. 

17- 
R.   &  B.  3:70.       C.  442. 

41. 


Heaven 

C.  491. 


Hearts.    R.  &  B.  3:193. 

65. 
In    a    B.   4:133.      C.   364. 

148. 
Likeness,   4:221.      C.   397. 


Balaxi.     4:268.       C.     604. 

i8g. 

IvJin,  (i :  131.     C.  881.    185. 

Dan.  Bar.  6 :  304.     C.  955, 

284. 
Hearts'-darling.     R.  &   B,  3:44. 

C.  431. 
Hearted.     Two   Cam.   6:262.     C. 

93s.     90. 
Heartful.     R.   &   B.   3:147.      C. 

472.     51. 
Heartquake.       Epil.    Two    Cam. 

6 :  263.     C.  938.     107. 
Hearth.    R.  &B.  3:26.     C.  424. 

55- 
R.  &  B.  3:281.     C.  526. 

19. 
Hearth-and-home.    Fr.  Fu.  6  :  328. 

C.  964. 
Hearth-fire.     Ari.   A.  5:111.     C. 

(i33. 
Hearth-partaker.      Agam.    6  :  22. 

C.  838. 
Hearth-rug.      Chve,   6 :  156.       €■ 

894. 
Hearth-sacrifices.      Agam.   6  :  40. 

C.  845. 
Hearth-sides.     Ari.  A.  5  :  171.     C. 

657, 
Heat.     Crist.   &  M.   6:203.      C. 

915.     282. 
Heathen.     R.   &   B.   3:318.      C. 

540.     216. 
Heaven.    Pau.  1:9.     C.  5.     168. 

Para.  1 :  106.     C.  42.     7. 

Straf.  1  :  133.     C.  51.     254. 

Straf.  1 :  182.     C.  70.     132. 

Straf.  1 :  188.     C.  72.     60. 

Sor.  1 :  307.     C.  120.     274. 

Old   Pict.   2  :  38.      C.   176. 

285. 

Old  Pict.  2  :  40.      C.   177. 

132. 

Before.  2  :  86.     C.  194.     20. 

A  Blot,   2:177.      C.    Zl). 

51- 
Her.  Trag.  2  :  316.     C.  281. 

152. 
Soul's  Tr.  2:341.     C.  291. 

183. 
R.   <k  B.  3:174,      C.  483. 

60. 


381 


Heaven 


INDEX 


Heaven.    R.  &  B.  3  :  186.    C.  488. 

107. 
R.   &  B.  3:193.      C.  491. 

212 

R.  &  *B.  3 :  272.     C.  522. 

R.   &  B.  3:392.     C.  568, 

34. 
R.   &  B.  3:422.     C.  579. 

60. 
R.  &  B.   3:471.      C.  599. 

262. 
Chris.-Eve,  4  :  14.     C.  321. 

60. 

Andrea,  4 :  85.    C.  346.    97. 

Andrea,  4:88.    C  348.    29. 

Gold  H.  4:165.      C.    377. 

20. 

Abt  V.  4 :  184.     C.  383.    9- 

Prol.  Fif.   4:383.     C.  702. 

i8g. 

Fifine,  4  :  393.    C.  707.   235. 

Ari.  A.5:100.     C.  629.    98. 

263. 
Forgiv.    5  :  359.       C.    817. 

no. 

Pietro,  6  :  177.    C.  904.     87. 

Sol.  &  B.  6  :  202.     C.  914. 

127. 
Heaven-heights.     La  S.  6  :  74.     C. 

858. 
Heaven-high.      La  S.   6:67.      C. 

H.")5.     169. 

Two  Poets,  6 :  89.     C.  863. 

Geo.  B.  D.  6:324.     C  963. 

129. 
Heaven-tinged.     Pacch.  5 :  319.  C 

803. 
Heaven's.    Sor.    1:259.     C.    100. 

279. 
Bv    Fire.    2:67.       C.    187. 


Colombe,    2:193.     C.   236. 

89. 
Luria,  2:371.    C.  30.3.    277. 
R.    &   B.   3:396.      C.   569. 

268. 
One  Word,  4 :  126.     C.  362. 


Ben  Ezra,  4 :  190.     C.   385. 

43. 
Liap.  6 :  400  ;  7 :  26.     C.  991. 

69. 

Rev.    6:439;    7:111.       C. 

1006. 
Heavy-hand.    Ari.  A.  5:231.     C. 

677. 
Hebe-slips.    R.  &  B.  3:325.     C. 
542. 


Hell-brood 

C. 


Hebetude.     R.  &   B.  3:374. 
561.     177. 

Chris.-Eve,  4 :  28.     C.  325. 

Hteuba-like.    R.  &B.3:402.    C, 


R.    &    B.  3:428. 
C. 


397.     C.   570. 


Hedge-bird's. 

C.  582. 
Hedge-fruit.     R.  &  B,  3 :  211. 

498. 
Hedge-side.    Waring,   2:270.     C. 

246. 
Hedge-sloe.      Flute-M.  6:423;  7: 

79.     C.  1000. 
Hedge-rose-cup.     Any    Wife,    2: 

69.     C.  188. 
Hee-haws.    Two  Poets,  6 :  104.    C. 

869.     8. 
Heedless.     Gram.  Fun.  2 :  312.    C. 

280.     197. 
Height.     Para.  1 :  80.     C.  32.  220. 

R.   &   B.    3:195.     C.  492. 

274. 
R.    &   B.    3: 

Death  in  D.  4 :  200.     C.  389. 

167. 

Rev.    6:439;     7:111.      C. 

1006. 
Heights.    R.  &  B.  3 :  292.    C.  530. 

200. 
Heine.     Dis  Al.  4: 174.     C.  379. 
Heir.     Para.  1:  118.     C.  47.     152, 
Helen.     Fifme,  4:  389.     C.  705. 

Fifine,  4 :  392.     C.  707. 

Dev.  6:428;7:89.    C.  1002. 

Hehast.     Ari.  A.  5 :  101.     C.  629. 
Heliast-Uke.    Ari.  A.  5: 172.     C. 

657. 
HeHcat.     Flight,  2:  299.     C.  275. 
Hell.     Saul,  2  :  58.     C.  184.     12. 
Her.  Trag.  2 :  316.     C.  281. 

152- 
R.    &    B.    3:13.     C.  419. 

238. 
R.    &    B.    3:19.     C.  422. 

286. 
R.    &  B.  3:125.     C.  464. 

II. 
R.    &   B.   3:139.     C.   469. 

148. 
R.   &    B.  3:263.     C.  519. 

65. 

Red   Cott.    5:1.3.     C.   741. 

106. 
CUve,  6:160.     C.895.    1 29. 


HeU-brewed.     Bad  D.  H.  6:  397  ; 

7 :  20.     C.  990.     58. 
Hell-brood.     Fust,  6 :  367.     C.  980. 


382 


Hell-deep 


INDEX 


Heroism 


Ilell-deep.     Bishop  B,  4 :  114.     C. 
;i.j,s.    ii8. 

Bean-St.    6:274.      C.    943. 

266. 
Hell-dress.     Pau.  1 :  21.     C.9. 
Hell-fire.     Para.  1 :  89.     C.  36. 

K.    &    B.  3:65.     C.    440. 

280. 
Hell-luied.    Pacch.5:319.     0.803. 
Hell-low.    Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  324.     C. 

9()3.     129. 
Hell-smoke.    R.&B.  3:209.     C. 

497. 
Hell -spawn.      Para.    1:104.      C. 

42. 
Hell-ward.     Family,    6:248.      C. 

933. 
Hell-wraps.     Ari.   A.   5:196.     C. 

()6(). 
Hell's.     R.   &    B.   3:5.     C.   416. 

35- 
R.   &  B.  3:106.     C.   430. 

20. 
R.   <fe  B.  3:229.     C.  505. 

196. 
Camel-D.   6:257.      C.   936. 

III. 
Hellish.    R.&B.  3:427.     0.581. 
Help.      Pippa,     1:327.      C.     129. 

112. 

01dPict.2:38.  C.  176.  192. 

Home-T.  S.  2 :  46.     C.  179. 

64. 

Flifflit,2:303.    C.  276.  257. 

Childe  R.  2 :  332.     C.  287. 

170. 
Soul's  Tr.  2 :  354.     C.  290. 

135. 
R.    &    B.    3:98.     C.   453. 

R.   &  B.  3:276.     C.   524. 

66. 
R.   &  B.  3:368.     C.    558. 

277. 
Fra  Lippo,  4:80.     C.   345. 

10. 

Fifine,4:412.     C.  718.  222. 

Forgiv.  5  :  364.    C.  819.  289. 

Help-cry.     Agam.  6:  41.     C.  845. 
Help-mates.     R.  &  B.  3 :  140.     C. 

470. 
Help-tune.    Saul,  2 :  48.     C.  180. 
Helps.    By  Fire.  2:66.     C.   187. 

261. 
Ben  Ezra,  4  :  187.     C.  384. 

81. 
Helped.    Holy-C.  2:318.     0.282. 
224. 


Helped.     R.  &  B.  3:  397.     C.  570. 

Helpful.    R.  &  B.  3 :  277.     C.  524. 
144. 

Ber.  de  M.  6  :  296.     C.  952. 

119. 
Helping.     Joch.    6:228.     C.    925. 

156. 
Helplessness.     R.  &  B.  3  :  25.     C. 

424.     36. 
Helter  -  skelter.      Paceh.     5  :  325. 

a  805. 
Hemlock  -  flowers.     Serenade,   2 : 

74.     C.  189. 
Hemp-dressers'.     By  Fire.   2:01. 

C.  186. 
Hemp-field.    R.&B.  3:442.     C. 

588. 
Hemp-seller.     Ari.  A.  5 :  152.     C. 

()49. 
Hemp-stalks.     By  Fire.  2 :  61.     C 

i.s(;. 

Henriette.  Straf .  1 :  144.  C.  55. 
Hem-y.  A  Blot,  2 :  153.  C.  220. 
Herald-star.  Sor.  1 :  201.  C.  78. 
Herakles.     Balau.4:288.     0.612. 

Ari.  A.  5 :  179.     O.  666. 

Herb.     Fr.   Fu.  6:338.      0.   968. 

xx^57. 
Herb-woman. 

644. 
Hercules.     Sor.  1 :  259.     O.  101. 
Herculean-built.   Fil.  Bald.  5 ;  383. 

0.  826. 
Herd.       Pietro,    6:177.      O.    904. 

37- 
Herdsmen's.     Para.  1 :  65.     O.  27. 

228. 
Hereafter.    Fifine,  4  :  406.    0.715. 
146. 

Ger.  de  L.  6  :  351.     O.  973. 

18. 
Heritage.     R.    &   B.   3:387.      O. 

.566.     188. 
Ben  Ezra,  4 :  187.     O.  384. 

4- 
Touch,  6: 191.   O.910.    186. 


Ari.  A.  5 :  139.     O. 


Hermit-bee.  Sor.  1 :  307.  0. 120. 
Hernshaw.  Flight,  2  :  299.  0.275. 
Hero.  Luria,2:390.  0. 310.  289. 
Hero-friend.   Soul's  Tr.  2  :  343.    O. 

292. 
Hero-pap.   Ari.  A.  5  :  143.    O.  646. 
Hero-race.    Ari.  A.  5: 149.    0.648. 
Heroes.     Herv^,  5:358.     O.   816. 

142. 
Heroism.    R.&B.  3:  397.   0.  570. 

114. 


383 


Herring-pond 


INDEX 


Hold 


Herring-pond.     Sludge,  4 :  257.    C. 

412.     22. 
Herv^  Kiel.     Herv^,   5:3J6.      C. 
81(5.     138. 

Two  Poets,  () :  81.     C.  861. 

Hesitate.    R.  &  B.  3 :  373.     C.  560. 
163. 

Red  Cott.  5:89.     C.  770. 

108. 
Hieeuped.    R.&B.3:48.     C.433. 

103. 
Hid.     Flight.  2: 294.     C.273.     28. 
Hide.   K.&E.3:226.   C.504.    79. 

Bishop  B.  4: 106.     C.  355. 

66. 
Hideousness.    Forgiv.  5:366.     C. 

820.     38. 
Hiding-house.    R.&B.3:414.    C. 

57(3. 
Hiding-place.     Italian,  2 :  253.     C. 

258. 
High.  R.&B.3:70.    C.  442.   150. 

An.  A.  5:  226.    C.  675.    65. 

High-backed.    R.&B.3:331.   C. 

.544 
Hi?h-blooded.    R.&B.3:2;3:3. 

C.  415.    71. 
High-bom.    R.   &  B.  3:24.     C. 

424.     184. 
High-brandished.     An.  A.  5 :  229. 

C.  676. 
High-cheeked.      Sor.    1:241.      C. 

93.     173. 
High-cheekboned.     Chris.-Eve,  4: 

19.     C.  322. 
High-crested.     Pau.  1:8.     C.  5. 
High-days.  R.  &  B.  3:  436.  C.  585. 
High-dowered.     Para.  1 :  119.     C. 

47.     5- 
High-flourished.    Mar.  Rel.  6 :  121. 

C.  876. 
High-flown.    CUve,6:158,    C.  894. 

89. 
High-heeled.    Two  Poets,  6 :  108. 

C.  871. 
High-minded.     Agam.   6 :  .30.     C. 

841. 
High-strung.     Para.  1 :  47.     C.  20. 

Fr.  Fu.  6:  330.     C.  965. 

High-supper.     Bean-F.  6 :  403  ;  7 : 

:k;.     C.  992. 
High-throned.    Two  Poets,  6:  94. 

C.  866. 
High-tide.    Two  Poets,  6 :  109.   C. 
872. 

Apol.  &  F.  6:292.     C.  951. 

284. 
High-walled.     Pau.  1:11.     C.  6. 


Higher.    R.&B.  3:399.     C.  571. 

258. 
Highfliers.      Gram.    Fun.    2:313. 

C.  280.     247. 
Highly-favored.      Sludge,   4:226. 

C.  399. 
Hill.     Sor.  1:326.     0.127.     Ii. 
HiU-eat.    Sor.  1 :  19<).     C.  77. 
HiU-foot.    R.  «feB.3:12.     C.  419. 

27. 
Hind-foot's.     Don.  6: 198.    C.  913. 
Hinders.     Prince   H.  4:365.      C. 
695.     94. 

— ; La  S.  6 :  61.     C.  852.     108. 

Hindrance.     La  S.  6 :  61.     C.  852. 
108. 

Two  Cam.  6:  261.     C.  938. 

108. 
"a  hmge."     R.  &  B.  3:78.     C. 

445. 
Hinges.    R.  «fe  B.  3:  292.     C.  530. 

267. 
Hints.      Fifine,    4:439.      C.    733. 

?33. 
Hi]5s-and-haws.     Two  Poets,  6 :  99. 

C.  8(i7. 
Hippolutos.     Artemis,   4 :  62.     C. 

337. 
Hiram's  -  Hammer.      Ben    K.    6: 

385.     C.  372. 
Hiss.    Soul's  Tr.  2:  357.     C.  298. 
Historians'.     Dan.  Bar.  6 :  303.    C. 

955.     189. 
Historiographer.    R.  &  B.  3:339. 

C.  548.     222. 
History.      Prince  H.   4:338.      C. 
684.     157. 

Forgiv.  5:  362.  C.  818.  284. 

Ponte  A.  6 :  411 ;  7 :  56.     C. 

99(j.     257. 
Histories.     Fifine,  4:428.     C.  727. 

91. 
Hither-thither.      Red   Cott.    5:4. 

C.  738. 
Hoar-haired.    R.&B.  3: 407.     C. 

573. 
Hoar-silvery.    Druses,    2 :  98.     C. 

198. 
Hob.    Hal.  &  Hob,  6: 128.   C.879. 
Hocus-pocus.      Pacch.  5 :  329.     C. 

8t  >i). 
Hog-grunts.      Chris.  -  Eve,    4 :  16, 

C.  321. 
Hogarth.     Red  Cott.  5:  7.    _C.  739. 
Hohenstiel-Schwangau.   Prince  H. 

4  :  .349.     C.  689. 
Hold.    Lost  Mis.  2 :  20.     C.   170. 

lOI. 


384 


Hold 

Hold. 


INDEX 
C.  171. 


Woman's,   2:23 
82. 

Eurydice,   4:217.     C.    395. 

141. 

Ivkn,  6 :  135,     C.  883.     77. 

Ilolds.     Death  in   D.   4 :  199,     C. 

389.     161. 
Hole.    K.  &  B.   3:131.     C.  46(3. 
105. 

E.  &  B.  3 :  272.     C.  522, 

Holland.    Straf .  1 :  137.     C.  53. 
Hollis.    Straf.  1 :  129.     C.  50. 
Hollo,     Trans.  4  :  57.     C.  335. 
Hollow-eyed.    Stat.  &  B.  2:326. 

C.  285 
Holpen. "  R.  &  B.  3:  31,     C,  426, 

106, 
Holy.     The  Confess.  2  :  15.    C.419. 
195- 

Chris.-Eve,  4 :  26.     C.  325. 

I97- 
Homage.     Two  Poets,  6 :  101.     C. 

868.     221. 
Homage-proper.    Ari.  A.  5 :  178. 

C.  659. 
Home's.     Prince  H.  4:331.      C. 

682. 
Home-aecoimts.    R.  &  B.  3  :  148. 

C.  473. 
Home-delights.    Inn  A.  5:  247.    C. 

775.  _ 
Home-incense,     Two  Poets,  6 :  97. 

C.  867. 
Home-law.     Ari.  A.  5:167.     C. 

655. 
Home-lilies.     Sor.  1 :  315.     C.  123. 
Home-manufacture.    R.  &  B.  3: 

58.     C.  437. 
Home-matters.      King  C.   1 :  393. 

C.  155. 
Home-sanctitudes.     R.   &    B.   3: 

318.     C.  540.     6, 
Home-squabblin'gs,     R.  &  B.  3: 

378.     C.  562, 
Home-thrust.    Doctor,  6 :  185.    C. 

907. 
Home-truths.      Bishop    B.    4  :  92. 

C.  349.     265. 
Home-uneasiness.  Red  Cott.  5 :  63. 

C.  7*50. 
Homelier.      Red  Cott.  5:2.      C. 

737. 
Homeward-hound.    Ari.  A.  5 ;  100. 

C.  628. 
Homunculus.    Pacch.   5 :  330.     C 

807. 
Honest.       Colombe,  2:211.       C. 

243.    219. 


Honest.      Childe  R 

R."  &    B.   3:34. 

153. 
R.   &  B.  3:193. 

65. 
R.   &  B.  3:231. 

132. 
Bishop   B.   4:95. 

55- 
Honey-clot.     R.   &   B.   3 


Hope 

333.  C. 
C.  428. 
C.  491. 
C.  507. 
C.  350. 
C. 
A  Face,   4:219. 


449. 
Honey-colored . 

C.  396 

Ivkn,  6 :  132.     C.  881. 

Honey-pot.     R.&B.  3:123.     C. 

463. 
Honey-ripe.     Sor.  1 :  246.     C.  95. 
Honey-smear.     Inn  A.  5 :  310.     C. 

800, 
Honey-smearing,    Ari,  A,  5:171. 

C.  656. 
Honey-wine.    Sor.  1 :  314.     C.  123. 

271. 
Honor.    R.   &  B,  3:33,     C,  427. 

12. 
R.   &  B.  3:66. 

130. 
R.   &  B.  3:153. 

196. 
R.   &  B.  3:289. 

207. 
R.    &   B.   3:292. 

117. 
R.   &  B.  3:297. 

114. 
R.   &  B.  3:315. 


R.   &  B.  3:340. 
3:367. 


277, 
R.   &  B, 


C.  440. 

C.  475. 

C.  529. 

C.  530. 

C.  532. 

C.  539. 

C.  548. 

C.  558. 


54. 


Honor-clothed.    Prince  H.  4 :  344. 

C.  687. 
Honorariiim-fee.   Prince  H.  4 :  373. 

C.  698. 
Honorius.     Sor.  1 :  195.     C.  75. 
Hook-nosed.     R.  &  B.  3:  246.     C. 

512. 
Hook-teeth.    R.  »fe  B.  3:36.     C. 

428.     44. 
Hope.    Para.  1 :  62.     C.  26.    77. 

Childe  R.  2:330.     C.  287. 

62. 

Childe  R.  2:331.     C.  287. 

244. 

R.  cVr  B.  3 :  7.     C.  417.    197. 

R.&B.  3:  66.     C.  440.    II. 


385 


Hope 


INDEX 


House-roof 


Hope.    In  a  B.  4:139.    C.  367.    i. 

Prol.  Pacch.  5 :  318,     C.  802. 

236. 

Pietro,  G :  172.     C.  001.    58. 

Joch.  (>:  230.     C.  im.     67. 

Hope-sick.    Sor.  1 :  196.     C.  76. 
Hopes.     Para.  1:35.     C.  1.5.     172. 

Para.  1 :  118.     C.  47.     152. 

K.   &    B.    3:27.      C.  425. 

153. 
Hoping.    Eas.-Day,  4 :  55.    C.  335. 

18. 
Horace.     Chris.   Sm.   6 :  316.      C 

960.     227. 
Horn-blind.    R.&B.  3:424.     C. 

580. 
Horn-like.     R.&B.  3:305.      C. 

535.     190. 
Horn  -  madness.     R.  &   B.  3:51. 

C.  434. 
Homet-prince.     Her.  Trag.  2 :  314. 

C.  280. 
Horoscope.      Evelyn,    2 :  24.       C. 

171. 
Horror.     R.    &    B.    3:231.      C. 

507.    53- 
Horror  -  fixed.      Artemis,    4 :  62. 

C.  337. 
Horse-exercise.     Inn  A.  5:  250,    C 

776. 
Horse-hands.     Pacch.  5  :  325.      C. 

805. 
Horse-length.    Mul^y.  6 :  166,     C. 

898. 
Horse -like.      Pacch.   5:327.     C. 

805.     83. 
Horse  -  neighings.      Chris.  -  Eve, 

4:16.     C.yQl. 
Horse-play.     R.&B.  3:377.     C. 
.502.     141. 

Ari.    A.    5:143,       C.    645, 

119. 
Horsefall,    Hiram    H.        Sludge, 

4 :  245.     C.  407. 
Horsehair-springe.  R.  &  B.  3:  267. 

C.  521. 
H6seyn.    Mu%.  6: 163.     C.  897. 
Hospital-array.      R.   &   B.   3:68. 

C.  441. 
Hospital-door.     Don.  6 :  199.     C. 

913.    44. 
Hospitality.     R.  &  B.  3:48,     C. 

433.     103. 
Host-wise.     Agam.  6  :  49.     C.  848. 
Host's.     Gondola,  2  :  264.     C.  262. 

100. 
Hot -bed.      Fr.  Fu,  6:331,      C. 

£(66. 


Hot-head.    Dan.  Bar.  6 :  304,     C. 

955. 
Hot-headed.    R.  &  B.  3: 192.    C. 

490.     232. 
Hot-house.     Two  Poets,  6 :  81.     C. 

861. 
Hound.      Soul's    Tr.    2:344,      C. 

292.     250. 
Hoimd-like.    Cenciaja,  5 :  374.    C. 

823.     5. 
Hour.     Pau.  1:1.3.     C.  7.     l6l. 

Para.  1 :  52.     C.  22.     72. 

Abt  V.  4:  185.    C.  383.    65. 

Hour's.     Dis  Al.  4  :  175.     C.  380. 

185. 
Hour's-sleep.    R.&B.  3: 344.     C. 

549.     57. 
Hours.     Inn  A.   5  :  251.      C.  777. 

227. 
House,    R,  &  B,  3 :  48,     C.  433. 
200. 

R.    &    E.  3:65.      C.  440. 

269. 

R.   &   B.   3:152.      C,  475. 

229. 

Trans.  4 :  58.     C.  336.     106. 

Caliban,    4  :  213.      C.    394. 

279. 

Bean-F.  6  :  403 ;  7  :  35.      C. 

9^)2.     210. 
House  -  beams.     Mesmer.  2 :  243. 

C.  2.55. 
House-book,    R.&B.  3:109.     C. 

457. 
House-dog-servant-things.     R.    & 

B.  3:130.     C.  4<J6. 

House  -  door  -  sill.      Hal.   &   Hob, 

6 :  130.     C.  880. 
House-eaves.    R.&B.  3:  264,     C. 

519, 
House-economy,    R.  &  B.  3:444. 

C.  589.    3. 

House-front.    Red  Cott.  5 :  16.    C. 

742.     39. 
House-guard.     Agam.  6 :  37.      C. 

844. 
House-mmate.     R.   &  B.  3:128, 

C.  405. 
House-keeping.     Agam.  6:7.     C. 

833. 
House-magistrate,   R.  &  B.  3 :  363. 

C.  556. 
House  -  master.  R.  &  B.  3:114, 

C.  4.59. 
House  -  mate's.     Red  Cott,  5 :  39, 

C.  751, 
House-roof,    R,  &  B.  3:12.    C. 

419. 


386 


House-side 


INDEX 


House-side.    Englishm.2: 258.    C. 

260. 
Household-bars.    R.    &  B.  3 :  85. 

C.  447.     io8. 
Household  -  expiation.      Ari.    A. 

5  :  207.     C.  GG'J. 
Household  -  joy.     Ari.   A.   5:170. 

C.  fi5(i. 
Household-news.    R.  «S;  B.  3 :  84, 

C.  447. 
Household  -  seclusions.      Ari.    A. 

5  :  223.     C.  G74. 
Household-stuff.    Pict.  Ig.  4 :  73. 

C.  342. 
HowLs.    R.  &  B.  3:155.     C.  476. 

98. 
Howlet.      Childe   R.  2:333.      C. 

2SS. 
Hudhud.     PiUar,  6:269.     C.  941. 
Hudl.    Chas.  A.  6:361.     C.  977. 
Hug.     Ari.  A.  5:176.      C.  659. 

170. 
Hugues.     Master    H.  2:92.      C. 

195. 
Hulking  Tom.    Fra  Lippo,  4 :  80. 

C.  344.     100. 
Human.     Glove,   2:250.     C.   257. 
189. 

Soul's  Tr.  2:339.     C.  290. 

248. 

Soul's  Tr.  2 :  350.     C.  295. 

266. 

R.  &  B.  3:219.      C.   501. 

288. 

R.   &  B.  3:227.     C.  505. 

211. 

R.   &  B.  3:471.     C.  599. 

251. 

Chris.-Eve,   4:4.      C.  317. 

227. 

Prince  H.  4.:  346,     C.  687. 

242. 

Ari.    A.    5:155.      C,   650. 

81. 

Ari.    A.    5:165.      C.    654. 

120. 

La    S.    6  :  59.        C.    851. 

140. 

Ber.  de  M.  6  :  298,     C.  953. 

54. 

Fr.    Fu.    6:329.      C.   965. 

185. 
Human  -  hearted.      Shop,    5 :  338. 

C.  809. 
Humanity.    R.  &  B.  3:23.      C. 
423.     204, 

Prince  H.  4:365.     C.  695. 

255. 


Hurts 

C. 

18. 


Humanity.     Family,    6 :  248, 

!«2.     31. 
Humble.      Para.    1:43,       C. 

198. 
Humbleness.     Inn   A.  5:290.     C. 

792.     223. 
Humors.    R.  &  B.  3 :  77,     C.  444. 

226. 
Hump-shoulder.    Nat.  in  D.  2 :  8. 

C.  l(!(i. 
Hundred-gated.    Love,  2 :  25.     C. 

172. 
Hundred  Merry  Tales.     R.  &  B. 

3 :  100.     C.  453.     99. 
Hunger.     Pau.  1 :  20.     C.  9.     92. 
Para.  1 :  49.     C.  20.     126. 


Hunger  -  bitten.      Mul4y.    6 :  165. 

C.  898.  _ 
Hunger-pinch.     Fra  Lippo,  4 :  76. 

C.  343.  _ 
Hunger-pined.     Ivkn,  6 :  140.      C. 

8,S(i. 
Hunger-wild.    Ari.  A.  5  :  205.     C. 

()(;9. 

Hungered.    R.  &  B.  3:154.     C. 

475.     173. 
Hungry.      Waring,     2 :  271.       C. 
265.     2. 

One  Word,  4  :  128.     C.  363. 

114. 

Eagle,  6:240.    C.  930.   199. 

Hunted.     Pau.  1:7.     C,  4,     239. 
Hunting.     Childe   R,  2:336.      C. 

289.     109. 
Hunting -clothes.     Flight,  2:292. 

C.  272. 
Hunting  -  ground.      Straf .    1 :  135. 

C.  52. 
Hunting-high.     Fr.Fu.  6:330.    C. 

965. 
Hunting-noose,     Light  W.  2  :  277. 

C.  267. 
Huntress-queen.    Ger.  de  L.  6 :  348. 

C.  972. 
Hurdle-weaving.    Sor.  1 :  285.     C 

111. 
Hurled.    J.  Lee,  4  :  160.     C.  375. 

29. 
Hmiied.    R.ctB.  3:171.    C.  482. 

254. 
Hurry.     Flight,   2:309.      C.   278. 

4- 
Hurry-down.     Pippa,  1 :  339,      C. 

133. 
Hurt.      Inn  A.    5:288.     C.  791. 

198. 
Hurts.    R.  &  B.   3:91.     C.  450. 

238. 


387 


Hurting 


Hurting.     R.  &  B.  3:  99.     C.  453. 

2o8. 
Husain.     Lima,  2  :  373.     C.  303. 
Husband.    R.  &  B.  3 :  7.     C.  417, 

200. 

R.   &    B.   3:4(5,      C.  432, 

271. 
R.  &  B,  3:206.     C,  496. 

103, 
R.   &  B.  3:291.     C.  530. 

207. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  313.  C.  538.  86. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  340.  C,  548.  275. 

277. 
R.   &   B.   3:349.      C.  551. 

206. 
R.   &  B.  3:401.     C.  571. 

229. 
R.  &  B,  3:423,     C.  580. 

121. 
In    a    B.   4:134,      C.  365. 

I34- 

Inn  A.  5  :  269.  C.  784,    148. 

Husband's.     R.  &   B.  3:60,      C. 
438.     8. 

R.   &    B.    3:87.      C.   448. 

226. 

R.   &  B.  3:334.     C.  546. 

165. 
Husband's-act.    R.   &  B.  3:136. 

C.  468. 
Husk-like.    Chas.  A,  6:363,     C. 

978.     169. 
Husks.    Red  Cott.  5 :  77,     C.  765. 

239. 
Huss- School.     Fust,  6:382,     C. 

986. 
Hut-Uke.    R.  &  B.  3 :  12.     C.  419. 

27. 
Hyacinth,     A  Face,  4:219.      C. 

.396. 
Hyssop-on-the-waU.     Two  Poets, 

6:81.     C.  861. 
Hysteric.     R.   &   B.   3:183.     C. 

487.     12. 


Ice-ball,    Apol.  &  F.  6 :  288.     C. 

949. 
Ice-block.    R.  &  B.  3:273.     C. 

.523.     171. 
Ice -checked.     Two  Poets,  6:81, 

C.  861. 
Ice-house.    Two  Poets,  6 :  81,     C. 

861. 
Ice  -  roughed.     Ivkn,  6 :  131.     C. 

881. 


INDEX  Ignorance 

An.  A.  5:238.      C. 
Prince  H.  4 :  338,     C, 


Ice  -  thaw. 

680, 
Ice-tracts, 

685. 
Icebrook,    Ari.  A.  5 :  164.    C.  654. 

80. 
Icicle.     R.  &  B.  3:125,     C.  464, 

107. 
Idalian.    Red  Cott.  5 :  26,     C.  746. 
Idea.     R.  &  B.  3:389.     C.  567. 

267. 
Ideal.    Bishop  B.  4 :  113.     C.  357. 

292. 
Idiot.    Two  Poets,  6 :  90,     C,  864. 

202. 
Idiot -like.      Inn  A.  5:278.     C. 

787. 
Idiot's-rambling.     R,  «&  B,  3 :  152, 

C.  475.     229. 
Idle,    Her.  Trag.  2 :  315,     C.  281. 

159. 
R.   &  B.  3:208.     C.  497, 


195- 
R.  &  B,  3:255, 


C,  516. 
C.    780. 
C. 


195- 
Inn    A.    5 :  261. 

54- 
Idleness.      R.   &    B.   3:458 

594.     269. 
Idly-probing.     Balau.   4:298.     C. 

616. 
Idol.    Jl.  &  B.   3:381,     C.  563. 

218, 
Idol-god.    R.&B.3:469.    C.  589. 
Idolatry.      Para.    1 :  80,      C.    32. 

142. 
Ignoble.    R.  &  B.  3 :  13.     C.  419. 

17- 
Ignorance.      Para.  1 :  92.      C.  37. 
161. 

R.&B.3:21.    C.423.   119. 

Prince  H,  4:356.     C.  692, 

64. 

Fifine,4:426.     C.726.   291. 

Ari.   A.    5:118.      C.    636, 

194- 

Pacch.5:331.    C.  807,   283. 

Pietro,  6:175,    C.  903.    187. 

Doctor,  6 :  182.    C.  906.    55. 

Joch.  6 :  219.     C.  921.     4. 

Pillar,  6 :  268.    C.  940.    127. 

PiUar,  6 :  269,     C.  941.     9. 

Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  323.     C.  963. 

226. 
Fr.    Fu.    6:336.      C.  968. 

127. 
Dev.6:429;7:90.    C.1003, 

132. 


388 


Ignorant 


Ignorant.      R.    &   B.   3:229 
505.     83. 

Red  Cott.    5:80.     C.   70(3. 

286. 

Ixion,  (5 :  209.     C.917.    275. 

Ignore.     Fra  Lippo,  4:  78.    C  344. 

81. 
Ilex-stems.     Sor.  1 :  214.     C.  83. 
lU.      R.   &  B.    3:244.      C.    511. 
59- 

R.   &  B.  3:251.      C.  514. 

61. 
lU-agreeing.    R.  &  B.  3: 122.     C. 

402.     54. 
lU-annouucing.     An.    A.    5 :  214. 

C.  (i72. 
Ill-appreciated.    Sor.    1:231.     C. 

90. 
Ill-boding.     Again.  6:31,     C.  842. 
Ill-clad.     Dis  Al.  4  :  177.     C.  380. 
Ill-considered.      Para.    1:32.      C. 

14. 
ni-delayers.     Agam.  6:8.     C.  833. 
Ill-doing.     Joch.  (i :  223.     C  923. 
Ill-exchanged.    Red    Cott.    5 :  39. 

C.  751. 
Ill-faring.     Agam.  6 :  24.     C.  839. 
Ill-fated.     Ari.  A.  5 :  191.     C.  664. 
Ill-favoured.    J.   Lee,  4:164.     C 

376. 
Ill-featured.     Sor.  1 :  258.     C.  100. 

162. 
Hl-groundedly.     R.   &    B.    3:57. 

C.  437. 
ni-guessed.    Ari.    A.  5:131,     C. 

641. 
Ill-judged.    Straf .  1  :  150.     C.  58. 
Ill-made,     Two  Poets,  6  :  107.     C. 

871. 
Ill-mate.     Agam.  6  :  23.     C.  839. 
Ill-minded.     Agam.  6 :  20.    C.  837. 
Ill-nature,    Sor.    1 :  286.     C.   111. 

76. 
Ill-reclaimed.    A  Blot,  2 :  147.    C. 

218. 
Ill-resident.      Agam.     6:23.      C. 

839. 
Ill-service.     Para.  1 :  57,     C.  24. 
Ill-spent,    Joch.  6 :  215.     C.  919. 
Ill-strewn.    Agam.  6:  18.     C  837. 
Ill-success.     Para.  1 :  121.     C   48. 
102. 

Soul's  Tr.  2  :  344.     C.  292. 

Ill-timed.    A    Blot,    2:151.      C. 

219.     227. 
lU-used.    R.  &  B.  3  :  251,     C.  514. 


INDEX 
C. 


Impudence 


64 
Hl-usest,    Pippa,  1 :  328.    C.  129. 


Illogical.    R.  &  B.  3 :  412.     C.  576, 

116. 
Illusion,     Luria,   2:394.     C.   312. 
132. 

La  S.  6:  65.     C.  854.    60, 

Camel-D.  6:259.     C.    937, 

lUnsion-proof.      Red   Cott.   5  :  ;>4, 


Joch,  6 :  225.     C.  924, 
5:92.     C. 
C. 
C. 
C. 

c. 
c. 


C.  749, 
Immature 

291. 
Immense.    Red    Cott 

771. 
Immerded.     Ari.    A.    5 :  137. 

643. 
Immitigably.     R.  &  B.  3  :  123, 

4(i3.     269. 
ImmobiHties.     Red  Cott.  5 :  4, 

738. 
Immortal.      Toccata,    2  :  36, 

175.     231. 
Immunity.    Ari.     A.    5:  136, 

643.     199. 
Impalpability.      Red   Cott.   5  :  97. 

C.  773.     236. 
Impatience.     R.  &  A.  3  :  379.     C. 

563.     63. 
Impertinence.     Red    Cott.    5 :  22. 

C.  744.     32- 
Impiety.    Ari.  A.  5 :  162.     C.  653. 

204, 
Implied.      Para.    1:98.      C.    39, 

278. 
Importunate.     Balau.   4 :  279.     C. 

60S.     193. 
Imjjossible.      Luria,    2 :  363.       C. 

299.     144. 

Death  in  D.  4 :  204.     C.  3!K). 

48. 

Red  Cott.  5:47.     C.   754. 

9. 
Imposthume.    R.  &  B.  3:  77.     C. 

444.     226. 
Impotence. "  R.  &  B.  3 :  342.     C. 
549,     248, 

Ari.    A,    5:162.      C.    653, 

96. 
Impoteney.     Fr.  Fu.   6:329.      C. 

965.     189. 
Impressment.      Red    Cott.    5  :  20. 


Para.   1:118.      C.   47. 


c.  744. 

Imprints. 

152. 
Improvement.     Prince  H.  4 :  340. 
C.  685,     194. 

La  S.  6  :  6S.     C.  855.     138. 

Impudence.      Plot-C.   6:266,      C. 

940,     199, 


389 


Impulse 


INDEX 


Incumbency 


Impulse.     Joch.   G:231.      C.  926. 

22. 

InuHinity.     R.   &   B.  3:295,      C. 

531.     224. 
Impurely-peevish.     Fr.  Fu.  G :  333. 

C.  96(3. 
In-doors.      R.   &   B.  3:459.      C. 

594. 
Ins-aAd-outs.    FUght,  2:308.     C. 

27.S. 
Inadequate.    R.  &  B.  3  :  185.     C. 

48S.     121. 
Inarmed.     Ari.  A.  5 :  99.     C  628, 
Inbioke.     Two  Poets,  6:104.     C. 

869. 
Incapacious.      Soul's    Tr,    2  :  341. 

C.  291,     232. 
Incomplete,     Red  Cott.  5 :  92,     C, 

771. 
Ineouseious.     Saul,  2  :  53,     C.  182. 

R.   &  B.  3:431,     C,  583, 

124. 
Inconstancy.     Fifine,   4:441.      C 

734.     73. 
Incurious.     R.  &   B.   3:151.      C. 

474.     206. 
Indiscretion.     R.  &B,3:340.     C. 

550.     133. 
Indispensable.      Red  Cott.   5  :  44. 

C.  753.     76. 
Ineffective.      Fifine,    4:391.      C. 

706.     242. 
Ineptly.     Ari.  A.  5  :  220,     C.  673. 
Infiltration.     R.  &  B.  3:98.     C, 

453.     71. 
Infinite.     Her.   Trag.   2:313.      C. 
280.     124. 

Chris.-Eve,  4:8.      C,  319. 

Eas.-Day,  4:56,      C.    335. 

160, 

Ari.    A.    5:104.      C.    630. 

119. 
Infinitude.     Ber.  de  M.  6 :  298.     C. 

953.     154. 
Injustice.      Sor.  1:282.      C.   110. 
181, 

Cenciaja,   5:369,      C.   821. 

270. 
Inland-hatched.     Colombe,  2 :  206. 

C.  241. 
Iimiost.    Fr.  Fu.  6:337.     C.  968. 

28. 
Imiominate.    Chas.  A.  6 :  357.     C. 

97ti. 
Imiumerable.    King  V.  1 :  371.    C. 

146.     61. 
lunumerous,     Ber.   de  M.  6 :  300. 

C.  954. 


Innumerous.     Imp.    Aug.   6 :  426  ; 

7  :  85.     C.  1002.     42. 
Inopportune.     R.&B.3:264,     C. 

519.     262. 
R.    &   B.   3:419.      C.  578, 

203. 
Inquisitive.   Karsh.  4  :  64.    C,  338. 

81. 
Insensible.     R.  &   B,   3:291.     C. 

'}M.     153. 
Inside.    R.  &  B.  3:454.    C.  593. 

232. 
Prince  H.  4  :  378.     C.  700. 

249. 
Rev.    6:435;    7:104.      C. 

1005.     183. 
Inside-archway.     By  Fire.  2 :  59. 


Bishop    B,  4:107. 
Saul,      2 :  56.       C. 


C.  185. 
Inside  -  nose. 

C.  .355. 
Insphering. 

183. 

Insuppressive.      Colombe,   2  :  194. 
C.  236.     122. 

R.   &  B.  3:425.     C.  581. 

193- 
Deaf  &  D.  4  :  216.     C.  395. 


47- 
Inviolate.     R,   &   B.  3:195.      C, 

492.     272. 
Incantation-gibberish.     Geo.  B,  D, 

6 :  323. _   C.  963.  _ 
Incarnadined,    Ari,  A,  5 :  196,    C. 

Incense.    Ponte  A.  6 :  409 ;  7 :  50. 

C.  995.     24. 
Incense-eating.    Agam.  6 :  19.    C, 

837. 
Incense  -  gaspings.      Cliris.  -  Eve, 

4  :  14.     C.  321, 
Incense-smoke.     St,   Prax,   4 :  90. 

C.  349. 
Incensed.     R,   &   B.   3:301.      C. 

.533.     76. 
Lich-allotment.     Bean-St.  6 :  276. 

C.  944. 
Inch-height.    R.  &  B.  3:  379.     C. 

563. 
Inch-high.    Chris.  Sm.  6:  313.     C. 

959.     36. 
Inch-long.    Ber.  de  M.  6 :  297.     C. 

953. 
Inch-low.     Chris.  Sm.  6 :  313.     C, 

959.     36. 
Inched.     R,  &  B.  3:82.     C.  44(3. 

240. 
Incumbency.     R.  &  B.  3:  364.    C. 

557.     134. 


390 


Incumbrance 


Inciinibranee.      Red    Cott.    5 :  43. 

C.  75-2.     165. 
Indices.      Para.     1:49.       C.    21. 

260. 
ludifference.     Ari.  A.  5 :  169.     C. 
G5(j.     60. 

Inn    A.    5:286.      C.    790. 

146. 
Indifferentism.     Chris. -Eve,  4 :  27. 

C.  325. 
Indi-nant.      R.    &   B.   3:65.      C. 

440.     68. 
Individual.       Fifine,     4:439.     C. 

733.     233. 
Individuality.      Red   Cott.    5 :  46. 

C.  754.     154. 
Indolent.      Colombo,    2:222.      C. 

247.     141. 
Ineffablest.    Saul,  2:57.     C.  184. 
Infamy.     R.  &  B.  3: 176.     C.  484. 

53- 
Infant-heir.    R.  &  B.  3  :  390.     C. 

5(;7. 

Infantine.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  359.     C. 
298.     51. 

Prince  H.  4:372.     C.  698. 

89. 
Infer.     R.  &  B.  3:169.     C.  482. 

286. 
Infernal, 

30- 
Lifluence.    Pau.  1 :  13. 

244. 
Ingle-glow.     Lovers'  Q.  2 :  29.     C. 

V-i'.i.    87. 
Ingot.      Two  Poets,   6:111.      C. 

872.    264. 
Ingres.     Dis  Al.  4: 174.     C.  379. 
Inheritance.      Fifine,   4:415.      C. 

720.     33. 
Initiator-spasm.     Fr.   Fu.   6 :  335. 

C.  967. 
Injury.     R.  &  B.  3: 140.     C.  470. 
288. 

R.  &   B.  3:288.     C.  529. 

no. 
Ink.     R.  &   B.   3:282.     C.  526. 

257. 
R.   &  B.  3:463.     C.  596. 

213. 
Forgiv.    5  :  367.      C.     820. 

20, 

Ink -shed.     Ari.   A.  5:125.      C. 

638. 
Ink-spirt.     Pippa,  1 :  352.     C.  139. 
Inn -yard.     R.   &  B.   3:55.      C. 

436. 
Inner-court.    Sor.  1 :  326.     C.  127. 


INDEX 

Innocence. 


OldPict.2:40.     C.177. 
C.7.  189. 


247. 
R.   &    B 


Intent 

Luria,2:382.    C.307. 

3:98.      C.   453. 

195- 
R.  &   B.  3:184,     C.  488. 

67. 
R.   &  B.  3:289.     C.  529. 

38. 
Inn    A.    5:296.       C,    794. 

114. 
Innocent.     R.   &  B.  3:260,     C. 

518.     48. 
R.   &  B.   3:336.     C.  546. 

226. 
Innocent,  Twelfth.   R.  &  B.  3 :  263. 

C.  519. 
InnocentinopolLs.     R.  &  B.  3:  310. 

C.  537. 
Insect.     Prince  H.  4 :  350.     C.  689. 

249. 
Fr.    Fu.    6:338.      C.    968, 

.  ^57- 
Insect-ridder.    Another  W.  2 :  76. 

C.  190. 
Insect-scattering.    Ari.  A.  5 :  110, 

C.  632. 
Inspecting-day.      A   Blot,   2  :  144. 

C.  216. 
Instance.     Inn  A.  5:  251.     C.  777. 

227. 
Instant.     R.&B.  3:278.     C.  525. 

273- 
Instinct.      Soul's  Tr.  2: 352.      C. 
295.     219. 

Fifine.  4:441.    C.  734.    233. 

Red  Cott.   5:92.       C.  771. 


99. 
Instinctive.      Balau.    4:295.      C. 

614.     280. 
Insult.      Lost    L.    2:4.      C.   164. 

288. 
Insultmg.     Luria,  2 :  387.     C.  309. 

26. 
Intellect.     Luria,  2:  366.     C.  301. 
Intellectuals.     R.  &  B.  3:  311.    C. 

537. 
Intelligence.      Prince    H.    4 :  343. 

C.  687.     248. 
Red  Cott.  5:67.     C,   762. 

Pillar,  6:  270.     C.941.   194. 

Geo.  B,  D,  6 :  322.     C.  962. 

211, 
Intelligenc}'.      Prince    H.    4:344. 

C.  6.S7.     106. 
Intensely-sparkling.     Para.  1 :  90. 

cm. 

Intent.    Para.  1 :  47.     C.  20.    88. 


391 


Intentness 


Fr.  Fa.  6:330. 


Intentness 

Interchange.     R.&B.  3:335.     C. 

54<J.     140. 
Intercourse.     Para.  1:41.     C  17. 

220. 
Interference.    R.  &  B.  3:57.     C. 

437.     277. 
Interfilleted.    R.   &  B.  3:4.     C. 

416. 
Intimations.    Para.  1 :  75.     C.  30. 

34- 
Intro-active.      Cleon,   4 :  119.      C. 

360. 
Invent.    R.  &  B.  3:  431.     C.  583. 

244. 
Investigator.    R.  &  B.  3 :  181.     C. 

487.     203. 
Inward.    R.  &  B.  3:  393.     C.  568. 

287. 
Inwardly.      Old  Piet.   2:40.      C. 

IV-     9.9- 
Iphigeneia.     An.   A.  5 :  106.      C. 

631.     65. 
Iris-bow.     Prol.  A.  6:389;   7:1. 

C.  987.     36. 
Irised.    EpU.  Fer.  6 :  283.     C.  947. 

9- 
Irks.      King  C.   1:403.      C.   159. 

122 

Hal.   &   Hob,   0:129.      C. 

S79.     14. 
Geo.  B.  D.  6:  320.     C.  962. 

Iron-mould.     Red  Cott.  5 :  41.     C. 

752.  _ 
Iron-spiked.    De  Gus.  2 :  45.     C. 

178. 
Irremissible.    Epil.  Pacch.  5 :  390. 

C.  828. 
Irreverence.     Chris.-Eve,4: 4.    C. 

317.     112. 
Is.    Death  in  D.  4 :  193.     C.  380. 

253. 
Iscariot,      R.    &    B.   3:232.      C. 

507. 
Island-bride.    Ari.  A.  5:100.     C. 

628. 
Island-countenance.    Straf .  1 :  134. 

C.  52. 
Islaud-gain.    Para.  1 :  90.     C.  36. 
Island  -  house.      Sor.    1:241.      C. 

93. 
Island-tribe.    Druses,  2:105.     C. 

200. 
Islet-bar.    Balau.  4 :  265.     C.  603. 
Italy.    R.  &  B.  3:477.     C.  601. 

269. 


INDEX 
C, 


Jesus 
C.  259. 


Italy's.    Italian,  2:254 

70. 
Itch.     Karsh.4:6.5.     C.  338.   287. 

Sol.  &  B.  6:  202.      C.  914. 

192. 

Fr.    Fu.    6:333.     C.    906. 

45- 
Itched.     Pacch.   5:323.      C.   804. 

I. 
Itching-fits.    Bishop  B.  4: 107.    C. 

.355. 
Itchy.    R.  &  B.  3:  26.     C.  425. 
Ivkn    Ivknovitch.      Ivkn,    6:131. 

C.  8K1. 
Ivory-linked.     Ger.  de  L.  0:348. 

C.  972. 
Ixion.      Crist.  &  M.  6:205.      C. 

915. 


Jack-boots.      Flight,  2:295.      C. 

273. 
Jack-in-the-Green.    Pacch.  5  :  330. 

C.  807. 
Jackdaw-song.    Ari.  A.  5:112.    C. 

633. 
Jacob' s-Sta£F.    Doctor,  6 :  187.    C. 

908. 
Jacopo.    Luria,  2 :  399.     C.  314. 
Jaeynth.     Flight,  2 :  2'.H}.     C.  274. 
How  it  S.  4 :  (X».     C.  337 


Jail  -  distemper.     Ned   B.   6:151. 

C.  892. 
James.     Death  in  D.  4 :  194.     C. 

386. 
James  Lee.     J.  Lee,  4: 165.     C. 

376. 
JansenLsts.      R.    &    B.   3:8.      C. 

417.     164. 
Jansenius.     R.   &   B.  3:443.     C. 

588.     201. 
Jauncing.    R.&B. 3:  406.    C.573. 

195- 
Jaw.      Fifine,    4  :  436.      C.    731. 

265. 
Jaws.    R.  &  B.  3:426.     C.  581. 

129. 
Jealous-fit.     R.  &  B.   3:51.     C. 

4:M.     113. 
Jelly-filth.     R.  &  B.  3:232.     C. 

507. 
JeUy-lump.     Prince  H.  4:  353.     C 

690. 
Jest.    Dan.  Bar,  6:305.     C.  95(i. 

168. 
Jesus.    R.  &  B.  3 :  462.     C.  595. 


392 


Jesus  Christ 


INDEX 


Judge 


Jesus  Christ.    R.  &  B.  3 :  278,    C. 

525.     209. 
Jethro's.     One  Word,  4 :  120.     C. 

362. 
Jew's-harp.    Red  Cott.  5 :  93.     C. 

772. 
Jewel.    R.  «fe  B.  3  :  119.     C.  4G1. 

1 96. 
Jewel-case.    R.  «S;  B.  3:418.     C. 

578. 
Jewel-cutting.     R.  &  B.  3: 1.     C. 

414. 
Jimcrack-novelty.    R.  &  B.  3 :  129. 

C.  4(35.     213. 
Jischab.     Joch.  (!:  216.     C.  920. 
Joan  of  Arc.     Fr.  Fu.  6:341.     C. 

970. 
Job.     R.  &  B.  3  :  22.     C.  423.    83. 
Job-like.     La  S.  6 :  66.     C.  854. 
Joconde.     R.  &  B.  3 :  2.     C.  415. 

139. 
John.    Sor.  1 :  260.     C.  101. 

Death  in  D.  4 :  1 94.     C.  386. 

John  of  the  Black  Bands.  R.  &  B. 

3 :  2.     C.  415. 
John  of  Douay.    Stat.  «fe  B.  2 :  327. 

C.  285. 
John    the    Pannonian.        Protus, 

2 :  320.     C.  283. 
Join.      By  Fire.  2:06.      C.   187. 
215. 

R.   &   B.  3:262.     C.  518. 

288. 

Mar.   Rel,  6:122.     C.  877. 

48. 
Jointed.     Flight,  2 :  292.     C.   273. 

13. 
Joke.     R.  &  B.  3:185.     C.  488. 

121. 
JoUily.    R.  &  B.  3  :  53.     C.  435. 
Joris.     How,  2:4.     C.  164. 
Jorum.     Pacch.  5 :  329.     C.  806. 
Joseph,     R.  &  B.  3  :  227,     C.  505. 

170. 
Joshixa  -  like.     Joch.   6:224.      C. 

923. 
Journey,      R.   &    B,   3:218,      C. 
501.     129. 

Prospiee,  4:216.      C.  395. 

243. 
Journey-charges.    R.  &  B.  3 :  148. 

C.  473. 
Journey's.      R.    &   B.   3:54.      C. 

435.     258. 
Jove.      R.    &  B.  3:12.      C.   419. 

80. 
Joy.     Pau.  1 :  15.     C.  7.     176. 
Para.  1:97.     C.  39,    205. 


Joy.    Para.  1:120.     C.  48.     179. 

Sor.  1 :  318.     C.  124.     157. 

Old    Pict.    2:40.      C.   177. 

.  70. 
In  Three  D.  2:  82.     C.  192. 

286. 
Lc'ist   R.   2:280,      C.   268. 

208. 
R.   &   B,  3:415,     C.  577. 

277. 
Chris.-Eve,  4:36.     C.  328. 

163, 
Worst,     4:171, 

283. 

Cahban,    4:210. 

^78. 
Balau.     4:305. 

162. 
Ari.    A.    5:154. 

239. 
Bean-St.    6:272. 

231. 
Dan.  Bar.  6:309. 

53. 


C.     379. 

C.    393. 

C.     618. 

C.   650, 

C,   942. 

C.  957. 

C. 

C. 


Joy  -  giving.      Cleon,    4 :  119. 

360. 
Joy -hunger.      Cleon,   4:  122. 

361. 
Joy's.    R.   &  B.   3:71.      C.  442. 

158. 
Two  Cam.  6:  262,     C.  938. 

163. 
Joys.    Saul,  2:49.     C.  180.     141. 
Ben  Ezra,  4:  186.     C.  384. 

178. 
Ari.    A.    5:232.      C.    678, 

"5- 

Bean-St.   6:272.      C.  942. 

128. 
Joyful.      Two  Poets,  6:112.      C. 

873.     243. 
Judas.     Mar.  Rel.  6:123.     C.  877, 

224. 
Judge.      Before,   2:86.      C.    193, 

92. 
Soid's  Tr.  2:353.     C.  296. 

160. 

R.  &  B.  3:  24.     C.  424.    2. 

R.    &   B.   3:189.      C.  489. 

129. 
R.   &  B.  3:244,     C.  511, 

59- 
R.    &   B.   3:354.      C.  553, 

162. 
R.    c\.-    B.   3:393.      C.  568. 

287. 
Pict.    Ig.    4:73.      C,  342. 

71. 


393 


Judge 


INDEX 
C.    980. 


Judge.       Fust,    6:368. 

24. 
Judge-and-jurying.   Ned  B.  6 :  149. 

C.  .S91. 
Judgment.     Sor.   1:208.      C.   80. 

56. 
Prince  H.  4:337.     C.  684. 

Ari.    A.    5:167.      C."  655. 

12. 

Bea.  Sig.  6 :  419 ;  7 :  70.     C. 

t)99.     240. 
Judgment  Day.     Two  Poets,  6 :  85. 

C.  862.     loi. 
Judgment-bar.    R.  &B.3:4.     C. 

416. 
Judgment-seat.    R.  &  B.  3:167. 

C.  481. 
Jukes,    Chief   Justice.      Ned    B. 

6 :  143.     C.  887. 
Jules.     Pippa.  1 :  342.     C.  135. 
June.     One  Way,  2 :  75.     C.  190. 

Another  W.  2 :  76.     C.  190. 

June-lightning.    Another  W.  2 :  76. 

C.  190. 
Jura's.     La  S.  6:  57.     C.  850. 
Just.     Bean-^t.   6:276.      C.  944. 

67. 
Just-budding.    Pan.  1 :  15.     C.  8. 

Fifine,  4  :  391.     C.  706. 

Just -dead.      Balau.   4:309.      C. 

620. 
Just -initiate.      Flute -M.  6:423; 

7 :  78.     C.  1000. 
Just-lugged.    Ned  B.  6:148.     C. 

8^)0. 
Just -quelled.     Sor.    1:287.      C. 

112. 
Just-returned.    Karsh.  4 :  66.     C. 

339. 
Just-tinged.    Sor.  1 :  202.     C.  78. 
Just  -  turned.      Chris.-Eve,    4 :  28. 

C.  326. 
Justice.    Colombe,  2 :  197.    C.  237. 
271. 

R.   &  B.  3:311.      C.  537. 

160. 

In  a  B.  4 :  137.     C.  366. 

Epil.   Bean-St.  6:282.      C. 

94(i. 

Ber.  de  M.  6 :  296.     C.  952. 

290. 
Justice  -  bringing.      Agam.   6:48. 


C.  847. 
Justificative.     R.  &  B.  3 :  463,     C. 

596.     129. 
■Justifies.    Bishop  B.  4:110.     C. 

356.     262. 


Justly-angered. 
C.  155. 


EUled 

King  C.   1:394. 


Kaiser.    Pietro,  6:176.      C.  903, 
^239. 
Kallimaehos.    Echet.  6: 154.     C 

893. 
Kameiros.     Balau.  4:  263.    C.  602. 
Kant's.      Prince    H.    4:356.      C. 

692. 
Karshook.     Druses,  2: 99.    (7.198, 
Karshook,   Rabbi  Ben.      Ben  K. 

6:385.     C.  372. 
Kate  the  Queen.     Pippa,  1 :  348, 

C.  137. 
Kktia.     Ivkn,  6 :  141.     C.  886. 
Keats,  John.      Popul.  2:92.      C. 

195. 
Kecks.     Pietro,   6:177.      C.  904. 

249. 
Keener.     Inn  A.  5:275.     C.  786, 

9. 
Keep.    Lost  Mis.  2:20.     C.  170. 
86. 

Saul,  2 :  49.     C.  180.     18. 

R.   &    B.    3:63.      C.  439, 

112. 
Keepsake  -  leaf .     R.  &   B.  3:69, 

C.  441. 
Kentaur-battle.      Ari.   A.   5:220, 

C.  673. 
Kentaur-race.    Ari.  A.  5 :  189.     C. 

664. 
Kept.    Pietro,  6 :  173.     C.  902.    i. 
Key.     J.    Lee,  4:164.      C.    376. 

146. 
Keystone.      R.  &  B.   3:415.     C. 

577.     283. 
K&vstone  -  coped.    Ari.  A.  5  :  220. 

Khalif-God.     Druses,   2:115.      C. 

204. 
KhaUl.     Druses,  2:99.     C.  198. 
Kibe.    R.  &  B.  3:398.     C.  570. 
8. 

Prince  H.  4 :  341.     C.  686, 

Kid-like.     Agam.  6:9.     C.  833. 
Kid-skin.     Ari.  A.  5 :  112.     C.  633, 

Fr.  Fu.  6 :  330.     C.  9«55. 

KiU.      Inn    A.    5:266.      C.    782. 


156. 
Kill-joys.     Ari.  A.  5: 145.    C.  646. 
Kill-or-cure.     Doctor,  6 :  183.     C. 

'.107. 
Killed.    R.  &  B.  3  :  290.     C.  529. 

155. 
394 


Killing-'work 


INDEX 


Knovrledge 


Killing-work.    R.&B.  3:289.    C. 

52!). 
Kimberic.      Ari.   A.    5 :  147.      C. 

<i47. 
Kin.      Red   Cott.   5:88.     C.   770. 

194- 
Kin-bom.     Agam.  6:  4(1.     C.  847. 
Kind.    Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  321.     C.  9G2. 

149. 
Kindlier.     A  Blot,  2 :  176.     C.  229. 
Kindly  -  hearted.      Pdlar,   6:209. 

C.  941. 
King.     Para.  1:111.     C.44.     225. 

Sor.  1 :  295,     C.  115.     287. 

R.    &  B.   3:426.      C.  581. 

49. 
King  -  serpent.     Saul,   2:48.      C. 

180. 
King's.    Sor.  1:287.     C.  112.     32. 
Kinglier.     Druses,  2  :  111.     C.  203. 
Kingship.     Soul's  Tr.  2 :  350.     C. 

295.     266. 
Kiikup.     Pacch.  5 :  318.     C.  802. 
Kiss.     Gondola,  2:204.      C.  262. 
166. 

Gondola,   2  :  205.      C.   202. 

16. 
Gondola,   2:269.      C.  264. 

52- 
R.   &  B.  3:144.     C.  471. 

87. 
Kiss-creased.    Sor.  1 :  285.    C.  111. 
Kisses.    Pau.  1 :  22.     C.  10.     30. 
Knack.     Sludge,  4:220.     C.   399. 

241. 
Knave.    Druses,  2:133.     C.  212. 

107. 
R.   &  B.  3:117.     C.  400. 

83. 

R.   &  B.  3:191.      C.  490. 

241. 
Knave's-pretext.  Colombe,  2  :  187. 

C.  234. 
Knave's-trieks.     Ari.  A.  5  :  167. 

C.  655. 
Knaves.    Pippa,   1:362.     C.   143, 

248. 
Kuaves'-policy.    R.  &  B.  3:193. 

C.  491 
Kneeling-place,     R,  &  B.  3:409. 

C.  574. 
Knew.    Straf.  1:151.     C.  58.    35. 

Popid.  2:90.    C.  195.     238. 

Childe  R.  2:336.     C.  289. 

214. 

InaB.4:134.     C.  305.    70. 

Bean-F.  0  :  403 ;  7 :  35.     C. 

992.     209. 


Knife.     Pippa,  1:339.     C.  134. 
Knit.     Pau.  1 :  21.     C.  9.     223. 

R.&B.3:.39.     0.429.    24. 

Knock-knee.    R.  &  B.  3 :  324.     C, 

542.     186. 
Knocks.    R.  &  B.  3 :  103.     C.  479. 

43- 
Kiiolled.      Prince   H.   4:374.     C. 

(i9.S. 
Knops.    Sor.  1 :  233.     C.  90. 
Know.     R.  &  B.  3:19.     C.   422. 

283. 
Joh.  Agri.  4:71.      C.  :«1. 

257- 

Andrea,  4 :  85.  C.  346.   273. 

In  a  B.  4: 149.     C.371.    77. 

Abt    V.  4:185.       C.    3.S3. 

169. 
Ben  Ezra,  4 :  188.     C.  384. 

291. 

Fifine,  4 :  418.     C.  721.    57. 

Red   Cott.   5 :  2.       C.   737. 

217. 

Red  Cott.  5:5.    C.  73.S.    22. 

Red   Cott.   5:41.      C.  7.52. 

148. 

La  S.  6:63.     C  853.     169. 

Pillar,  6:  267.    C.  940.    148. 

Pillar.  6:  269.    C.941.    149. 

Bean -St.  6:275.      C.   943. 


Knows. 


Ger.  de  L.  6:346.     C.  971. 

234- 
Chas.   A.   6:358.      C.  976, 

169. 
Rev.    6:434;    7:102.       C, 
1005.    46. 

Death  in  D.  4:193.     C. 
386.     253. 

Death  in  D.  4 :  204.     C.  391. 

163. 

Two  Poets,  6 :  112.     C.  873, 

56. 
Knowmg.     R.  &  B.  3:192.     C, 
490.     96. 

Two  Cam.  6:262 

90 


395 


Knowledge.    Sor.   1 :  234. 

207. 
R.   &  B.  3:378. 

63. 
Bishop  B.  4:  111. 

114. 
Death  in  D.  4 :  203. 

155. 
Fifine,  4:  428.    C.  727.    183. 

218. 
Ari.  A.  5:  220.    C.675.    65. 


C.  938, 
C.  91. 
C.  562. 
C.  351. 

c.  390. 


Knowledge  INDEX 

Knowledge.    La  S.  6 :  63.     C.  853 
67. 

Joeh.  0 :  219.     C.  921. 

Camel-D.   U:259.      C. 

"5- 

Pillar,  6 :  209.     C.  941. 

Chas.  A,  6:362.      C. 

171. 
Knowledge-tree.    R.  &  B.  3: 

C.  544.     118. 
Known.    Chas.  A.  0 :  358.     C. 

II. 
Knuckle-summons.  Sludge,  4 : 

C.  407. 
Kolokol.     Iv^n,  6:141.     C.  8S 
Komos-cry.     Ari.  A.  5:  112. 

633. 
Koppa-marked.     Ari.  A.  5: 

C.  631. 
Koppelberg.     Pied  Piper,  2: 

C.  270. 
Kordax-step.    Ari.  A.  5: 101. 

629. 
Kothorned,     Ari.  A.   5:103. 

630. 
Kottabos.    Ari.  A.  5:  226.    C. 
Kukloboros  -  roaring.        Ari. 

5:174.     C.  658. 


Lamp-voyager 


4. 

937. 

54. 

97S. 

330. 
976. 
245. 

C. 

107. 

287. 

c. 
c. 

675. 
A. 


Labor.    Para.  1 :  68.     C.  28. 
Old    Pict.  2:41.      C. 

95- 

Lm    A.    5:270.       C. 

242. 
Labor -plagued.      Ari.  A.  5: 

C.  672. 
Labor-throe.    Ari.  A.  5 :  204. 

669. 
Labor's.    MaryW.  1:206.    C. 

290. 
Lace  -  and  -  ruffles.     Clive,  6: 

C.  895. 
Lace-work.     R.  &  B.  3:21. 

423. 
Lachares.      Ari.    A.    5 :  226. 

675. 
Lack.      Fifine,    4:398.      C. 
III. 

Pietro,  6 :  172.    C.  901. 

Lack-lustre.    R.  &  B.  3:  456. 

593.     144. 
Lacks.      One   Word,   4 :  126. 

3<)2.     2. 
Lackey-o£-Ues.     R.  &  B.  3; 

C.  495. 


I. 
177. 

784. 

217. 

C. 
916. 
158. 

C. 

c. 

710. 

'%: 

C. 
202. 


R.  &  B.  3:31.     C. 


Lackey-work .    R .  &  B .  3 :  40.     C. 

4:'.().    208. 
Lacking.    R.  &  B.  3 :  71.     C.  442. 

276. 
Lacquer.    Joeh.  6:227.     C.  925. 
Lacquered.      Pillar,    6:268.      C. 

946.     127. 
Lad.     R.   &  B.  3:36.      C.  428. 

175. 
Ladder-like. 

426.     106. 
Lady.      Pippa,    1:349.      C.    137. 
171. 

Englishm.  2:260.     C.  261. 

168. 

Flight,  2 :  292.   C.272.  227. 

Lin    A.    5:288.      C.    791. 

85. 
Lady-city.     Sor.  1 :  261.     C.  101. 
Lady -mother's.     R.  &  B.  3:48. 

C.  433.     no. 
Lady-patroness.     R.  &  B.  3:465. 

C.  597. 
Lady-wife.     R.  &  B.  3:41.     C. 

4:30. 
Lais.    Ari.  A.  5 :  2.32.     C.  677. 
Lake-flower's.    Flight,  2  :  298.    C. 

274. 

Lake-lily.    Para.  1 :  118.     C.  47. 
Lamb,   Jane.       Likeness,    4 :  220. 

C.  397. 
Lamb.    R.  &  B.  3:78.      C.  445. 

14. 
Lamb-Kke.    R.  &  B.  3:325.     C. 

.542.     275. 
Lamb-pure.    R.  «fe  B.  3:68.      C. 

441. 
Lambency.     Ari.   A.  5 :  117.      C. 

(;35. 

Lame.    R.  &  B.  .3 :  461.     C.  595. 
Lamia-shape.    Ari.  A.  5:174.     C. 

658. 
Lamp.       Para.     1 :  101.       C.     40. 

172. 
Stat.  &  B.  2 :  328.     C.  286. 

223. 
R.   &  B.  3:371.      C.  559. 

156. 
Death  in  D.  4 :  202.     C.  390. 

53- 

Mul^y.     6:165.       C.    898. 

138. 
Lamp-flame.    Pietro,  6:177.     C. 

904. 
Lamp -fly.     R.  &   B.  3:12.      C. 

419. 
Lamp-voyager.    Agam.  6:11.     C. 
834. 
396 


Lamps  INDEX 


Lamps.    R.  &  B.  3:  381.     C.  563. 

31- 

Chris.-Eve,  4:19.     C.  .323. 

69. 
Lamping.    Ari.  A.  5 :  232.     C.  678. 
80. 

La  S.  6 :  56.     C.  850.     239. 

Lampions.     Respecta.   2 :  80.      C. 

I'.a. 
Lamplight.    Bean^t.  6:272.     C. 

942.     III. 
Lance.      R.  &  B.  3: 180.     C.  486. 

186. 
Lance-like.    R.&B.  3:437.     C. 

586.     6. 
Lance  -  thrust.      Bean-St.    6:275. 

C.  943. 
Lancet-puncture.    R.  &  B.  3 :  262. 
C.  519.    204. 

Prince  H.  4 :  365.     C  695. 

Lancet-windows.    R.&B.  3:199. 

C.  493.     58. 
Land  of  Promise.    R.  &  B.  3 :  150. 

C.  474.    61. 
Land.      Fifine,    4:420.      C.    723. 
172. 

Red    Cott.    5:4.      C.   738. 

201. 
Land-lahor.     Balau.  4:276. 


607. 
Land -line.     Ari.   A.   5:238. 

680. 
Land-strip.    Two  Poets,  6 :  79. 

860. 
Land-things.     Agam.  6 :  18. 

837. 
Land-travel.    Waring,  2:  274. 

2(56. 
Landed.    R.  &  B.  3 :  317.     C.  539. 

235. 
Language.     R.   &  B.  3:27.     C. 
425.     62. 

One  Word,  4 :  125.     C.  362. 

Ben  Ezra,  4 :  189.     C.  385. 

76. 
Lank-haired.    Sor.  1 :  241.     C.  93. 

173. 
Lantern-jawed.    R.  &   B.  3:122. 

C.  462.     113. 
Lantern-light.    R.  &    B.    3:280. 

C.  525. 
Laocoon.    Prince    H.  4 :  357.     C. 

692. 
Lapaccia,  Aunt.    Fra  Lippo,  4 :  76. 

C.  343. 
Lap'o.     Luria,  2 :  363.     C.  299. 
Lappets.    Prol.  Pa«ch.  5 :  317.    C 

802. 


Lathen 
Chris.  Sm.  6:  310.    C.  960. 


Lapse 

15. 
Lapsing.     R.  «feB.  3:455.    0.593. 

183. 
Larch-heart.     Her.    Trag.   2:314. 

C.  280. 
Large.    Sor.  1 :  232.     C.  90.     8. 

Rev.    6:435;    7:103.       C. 

1005.     154. 
Large-lettered.     R.  &   B.   3:229. 

C.  .505.     196. 
Large-looming.      Ari.    A.    5 :  118. 

C.  635. 
Large-veined.    R.  «feB.3:28.     C. 

425.     83. 
Largelier.     R.  &    B.   3:395.     C. 

5()9. 
Larger-souled.     Bean-St.   6:275. 

C.  943. 
Lark-Hke.    Ari.    A.    5 :  149.      C. 

64.S.     59. 
Larks.     R.  &  B.  3:75.     C.  444. 

142. 
Larum.    R.  &  B.  3 :  52.     C.  434. 
Last.    R.  &   B.  3:224.     C.  504. 

222 

Red  Cott.  5:6.     C.  738. 

Last-day.     Ari.  A.  5 :  126.    C.  639. 
Last-lays.    Agani.  6 :  37.     C.  843. 
Lasts.      Luria,    2:369.      C.    302. 
200. 

Ben  Ezra,  4 :  190.      C.  385. 

246. 

EpU.  Two  Cam.  6 :  263.     C. 

938.     20. 
Lasting.    In  a  B.  4: 143.     C.  368. 

15. 
Late.    R.   &  B.  3:192.     C.  490. 
288. 

R.  &  B.    3:407.      C.  574. 

83. 

R.  &  B.  3  :  4(54.    C.  596.    5. 

Late-completed.      Imp.    Aug.    6: 

425;  7:82.     C.  1001. 
Late-ejected.     Clive,  6:101.      C. 

8!H3.     203. 
Late-foimd.     Rev.  6:436;  7:106. 

C.  1005. 
Late-sent.     Agam.  6:5.     C.  832. 
Late-so-tuneful.    Joch.  6 :  216.    C 

920. 
Late-to-bed.      Agam.    6 :  26.      C 

840. 
Latent.     Soul's  Tr.    2:339.      C. 

290. 
Lath-and-plaster.    Chris.-Eve,  4: 

1.     C.  316. 
Lathen.    R.  &  B.  3  :  161.     C.  478. 


397 


Latinize 


Latinize.    R.   &    B.    3:318.      C. 

540.     6i. 
Latish.     Prince  H.  4:  331.     C  682. 
Lattice-square.    R.  &   B,  3:264. 

C.  .J19. 
Laud.    Straf.  1 :  131.     C.  50. 
Laudable.     Karsh,  4 :  66.     C.  339. 

21. 

Laudation.     Chas.  A.  6:356.     C. 

975.     25. 
Laugh.     iSor.  1:205.     C.  79.     117. 
Stat.  &  B.  2:  327.     C.  286. 

114. 
R.   &    B.  3:95.      C.    451. 

214. 
R.   &   B.  3:189.     C.   489. 

129. 
R.   &    B.  3:311.     C.  537. 

254- 

Red  Cott.  5:24.      C.  745. 

62. 

Mag.  Nat.  5  :  346.     C.  812. 

122. 
Laugh-and-lose.      Inn    A.  5 :  275. 

C.  786. 
Laughs.    Ari.  A.  5 :  121.     C.  637. 

255- 
Laughed.      How,    2:5.      C.    165. 
245. 

Ari.  A.  5: 115.  C.  6-35.   132. 

Laughing-stock.    R.  &  B.  3: 139. 
C.  469.     30. 

R.    &   B.   3:224,     C.   503. 

152. 
Laughter.     Old  Pict.  2:40.     C. 
177.    30. 

La  S.  6 :  74.     C.  858.     281 . 

Laughter-loving.    R.  &  B.  3:  421. 

C.  579. 
Laughters.    Ger.  de  L.  6 :  348.    C. 

972.     175. 
Laureate.     Inn  A.  5:254.     C.  778. 
Laurel-branch.       Ari.   A.   5 :  104. 

C.  630. 
Laurels.     Paceh.  5:319.     C.   803. 

90. 
Lausanne.    La  S.  6:  74.     C.  858. 
Laver.    Sor.  1 :  264.     C.  102. 
Lavish.    Doctor,  6:184.     C.  907. 

95. 
Law.    Para.  1 :  118,     C.  47.     197. 

Straf.  1 :  171,     C.  65.     166. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  4.    C.  416.     129. 

R.&B.3:99.   C.453.   210. 

— R.   &    B.  3:148.     C.   473. 

199. 

R.   &.  B.  3:167.    C.  480. 

88, 


IXDEX 

Law 


Law^'s 


R.   &  B.   3:298.     C.  532. 

78. 
R.   &    B.  3:299.     C.  532. 

108. 
R.   &   B.   3:301.     C.  533, 

229. 
R.   &    B.   3:. 346.     C.   550. 

200. 
R.   &    B.   3:351.     C.   552. 

280. 
R.   &   B.   3:361.     C.  555, 

24. 
R.   &    B.  3:366.     C.  557. 

87. 
R.   &   B.  3:371.     C.  559. 

225. 
R.    &    B.   3:376.     C.  561. 

9.. 
R.   &   B.   3:378.     C.  562. 

277. 
R.   &    B.  3:379.     C.  563. 

174. 
R.   &   B.  3:412.     C.  576, 

96. 
R.    &   B.  3:4.34.     C.  585. 

80. 
R.   &   B,  3:436.     C.  585. 

50- 
R.   &    B.  3:447.     C.  590. 

223. 
R.   &    B.   3:473.     C.  600. 

"3. 
Karshish,    4:67.      C.    339. 

279. 
Job.    Agri.    4:71.     C.  341. 

257- 

Prince  H.  4:364.     C.  695. 

259. 

La  S.  6 :  71.     C.  857.     53. 

Apol.  &  F.  6 :  293.     C.  951. 

127. 
Law-breaking.    Agam.  6 :  45.     C, 

646 
Law-bud.    R.&B.3:294.    C.  531. 
Law-courts.    R.  &  B.  3:10.     C. 

418.     203. 
Law-flouter.    Apol.  &   F.  6:287, 

C.  949. 
Law-god.     R.  &   B.  3:354.     C. 

553. 
Law-makes.      Joch.    6:228.      C. 

925.     43- 
Law-procedure.     R.  &  B.  3:400, 

C.  .571. 
Law-released.     La  S.  6 :  72,     C. 

857, 
Law's.    K.  &  B.  3:297.    C.  532. 

"5. 
398 


1 


La-w's 
Law's. 


R.  &  B.  3:298. 
119. 
R.   &  B.  3:437. 
22. 


INDEX 

C.  532 
C.  586 


Laws.    AbtV.4:183.    C.383.   10. 

Red  Cott.  5 :  80.     C.  766. 

Lawful.    R.  &  B.  3:  308.     C.  536. 


Inn  A,  5:279.     C.  787. 
C. 


158. 
Lawless. 

146. 
Lawsuiting.    R.  &  B.  3:  448, 

590.     267. 
Lawjer-pkrase.     R.  &  B.  3:109. 

C.  457. 
Lawyer-pleadings.    R.  &  B.  3:  4. 

C.  416. 
Lay.    Joh.   Agri.  4:71.     C.  341. 

95- 
Laj-dress.    R.  &  B.  3:127.     C. 

465. 
La^nngs-down.    Soul's  Tr.  2:  339. 

C.  2<K). 
Layman' s-salt.     R.  &  B.  3 :  149. 

C.  473. 
Lazai-badge.    R.  &  B.  3:  47.     C. 

432. 
Lazar-haunter.   Para.  1 :  78.  C.  32. 
Lazar-hoiise.    R.  &  B.  3:86.     C. 

448.     37. 
Lazarus.    R.  &B.3:169.     C.481. 
130. 

Karsh.  4 :  66.     C.  339. 

LeRoux.     Crist.  6:205.     C.  915. 
Lead.     Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  322.     C.  963. 

290. 
Leads.     Sludge,  4:234.     C.  403. 

263. 
Leaf.     By  Fire.  2:65.     C.  187. 
129. 

R.   &  B.  3:372.    C.  560. 

246. 

La  S.  6:57.     C.  851.    249. 

La  S.  6 :  66.     C.  854.    286. 

Leaf  -  and  -  twiggishness.      Pacch. 

5 :  330.     C.  807. 
Leaf-ball.      Ari.   A.    5:229.      C. 

676. 
Leaf-buds.    Lost  liiis.   2:20.     C. 

170. 
Leaf-dust.    Sor.  1 :  252.     C.  98. 
Leaf-faU.    Sor.  1 :  240.     C.  93. 
Leaf-gold.     R.  &  B.  3:27.      C. 

425.     26. 
Leaf -luxuriant.    Agam.6:22.    C. 

8;>s. 
Leaflet-promise.  Ber.  de  M.  6 :  297. 

C.  953. 
Leah.    R.«feB.  3:172.    C.  482. 


Ledge 
C.  569. 


Lean.    R.   &  B.  3:396 

245- 
Lean-gutted.    R.&B.3:2S4.     C. 

527.     201. 
Leanness.    Childe  R.  2:334.     C. 

288. 
Leaning-place.     Red  Cott.  5 :  42. 

C.  752. 
Leaf.    Red  Cott.  5 :  .3.    C.737.    30. 
Leap-year.     St.  Mart.  5:354.     C. 

815.     138. 
Learn.     R.  «fe  B.  3:407.     C.  574. 
83. 

Ben  Ezra,  4:186.     C.  384. 

242. 

Fifine,  4 :  428.    C.  727.    183. 

Inn  A.  5 :  272.    C.  785.    123. 

Ber.  de  M.  6 :  295.     C.  952. 

180. 

Chris.  Sm.  6:  318.     C.  961. 

140. 
Learns.      Ben  Ezra,   4:  188.      C. 
384.     154. 

Death   in   D.   4 :  197.       C. 

388.     233. 
Learned.    Gram.  Fun.  2:  311.     C 

279.     136. 
R.   &    B.  3:26.      C.  424. 

122 

R.  &'B.  3:476.      C.  600. 

130. 

Balau.4:303.    C.618.    177. 

Two  Poets,  6 :  115.     C.  874. 

190. 
Learning.     Chris. -Eve,  4:25.     C. 

325.     145- 
Learning-worth.    Agam.6:51.    C. 

848. 
Learnt.    Sor.  1:222.    C.  86.    275. 
Leave.     Para.  1 :  33.     C.  14.     238. 
Stat.  &  B.  2 :  .325.     C.  285. 

272. 
R.    &   B.   3:84.       C.  447. 

207. 
Leaven.    Old  Pict.  2 :  40.     C.  177. 

255- 

Before,  2 :  86.     C.  194.    20. 

Pacch.  5:327.    C.805.    127. 

Lebanon.     Druses,  2:  111.     C.  203. 
Lecture.      Flute-M.  6 :  424 ;  7 :  81. 

C.  1001.     135. 
Lecturing.    Joch.  6:217.     C.  920. 

205. 
Led.    Chris.  Sm.  6:312.     C.  959. 

57- 
Leda.    Inn  A.  5 :  252.     C.  777. 
Ledge.    R.  &  B.  3:  231.     C.  507. 
I     132. 
399 


Lee,  Vernon 


INDEX 


Lee,  Vernon.    Inap.  6 :  400  ;  7 :  27. 

C.  991. 
Leek -and -onion -plait.     Ari.   A. 

5 :  122.     C.  (>M. 
Leer.    Childe  R.  2:331.     C.  287. 

46. 
Leered.    R.  &  B.  3:  221.     C.  502. 
152. 

Phei.  6 :  125.     C.  878.     64. 

Leet-day.    R.  &  B.    3:346.      C. 

550. 
Left.    Flight,  2 :  291.    C.272.    96. 

Luria,  2 :  399.     C.  314. 

Left-hand.     Hal.   &  Hob,  6:1.30. 

C.  880. 
Legs.    R.   &  B.  3:126.     C.  464. 

X  39- 

Legs-and-arms.    Colombe,  2 :  201. 

0.239.     161. 
Legate-rule.    R.  &  B,  3 :  364.     C. 

Legend.    Rev.  6: 435;  7:103.     C. 

1005. 
Legendary.     Dan.  Bar.  6 :  303.    C. 

955      ^2 
Leigh'ton.  '  Chris.  Sm.  6 :  314.     C. 

959. 
Leisure.     Fust,  6:378.      C  984. 

127. 
Leman.      Fust,  6:368.      C.  980. 

95- 
Lend.     R.  &  B.  3:20.     C.  422. 

237- 
Lend-and-borrow.  Pisgahl.  5:  341. 

C.  810. 
Leus.     Prol.  A.  6  :  389  ;  7:1.     C. 

987. 
Lent-lectures.    Up  —  Down,  2  :  34. 

C.174. 
Lentil-soup.     Mihrab,  6  :  254.     C. 

935. 
Lenti'sk.    Sor.  1 :  279,     C.  109. 
Leonard.     Fr.  Fu,  6 :  331.     C.  966. 

42. 
Leopard-dog-thing.    Before,  2 :  86. 

C.  194. 
Leporello-list.     Inn  A.  5 :  258.     C 

779. 
Leprosy.     Childe  R.  2:332.      C. 

287.    97. 
Less.     By  Fire.  2:65.      C.  187. 

12. 

Less-favored.     Two  Poets,  6:81. 

C.  860. 
Lesson.  J.  Lee,  4:102.     C.  376. 

287. 
Chris.  Sm.  6:  317.     C.  961. 

242.  ^ 


Lesson-book.    Epil.  Paech.  5 : 

C.  829.    216. 
Lesson-lacking.     R.  &  B.  3: 

C.  574.     191. 
Lessoned.      A    Blot,   2 :  148. 

218. 
Letch.    R.  &  B.  3:229. 

103. 
Letter.     R.  &  B,  3:282 


257- 
R.   &  B.  3:447. 


C. 

C. 

c. 

c. 

c. 

c. 

c. 

c. 

c. 


223. 
Letters.    R.  &  B.  3:98 

71. 
R.   &  B.  3:129. 

120. 
Lets.      Ari.  A.  5:159, 

85. 
Level.    R.  &  B.  3:284. 

130. 
J.    Lee,    4:158, 

161. 
Ari.    A.    5:237. 

36. 
Geo.  B.  D.  0:321.     C. 

168. 
Levigable.    Chris.-Eve,  4 :  25. 

325. 
Levigate.    R.  «feB.3:26.     C. 

141. 
Levite-rule.    R.  &  B.  3: 159. 

477. 
Liar.     R.    &   B.  3:471.      C. 

93. 
Liars.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  338,     C. 

Liberality.     Ari.   A.   5 :  100. 

628.     98. 
Libertinage.    R.  &  B.  3:  111. 

4.58.     107. 
Libei-ty.    R.  &  B.  3:  ;300.     C. 

130. 
License.    Pict.  Ig.  4:  72.     C. 

262. 
License-free,    Ari.  A.  5 :  233. 

678. 
Licenses.    Druses,  2 :  100.     C. 

32. 
Licit.    R.  &  B.  3:3.31.     C. 

65. 
Licked.    R.&B.  3:222.     C. 

170. 
Lie.      Waring,    2:271.      C. 
16. 

Childe  R.  2:  330.     C. 

68. 

Soul's  Tr.  2:354.     C. 

185. 


Lie 

393. 

408. 

C. 

505. 
526. 
590. 
453, 
466. 
652. 
527. 
374. 
680. 
962. 
C. 
425. 

a 

599. 

289. 
C. 

c. 

533. 
341. 

a 

199. 
545. 
503. 
265. 

287. 
296. 


400 


Lie 

Lie. 


II.  &  B,  3:aS.    C.  429.  258. 
K.   &    B.   3:80.      C.  445. 

R.   &  B.  3:399.     C.  571. 

Chiis.-Eve,  4  :  26.      C.  325. 

181. 

Fifine,  4 :  420.     C.  723.     60. 

Bed   Cott.   5:3(j.      C.   750. 

263. 
Ari.    A.    5:135.      C.   642. 

152. 
Inn    A.    5:265.       C.    7S2. 

282. 
Crist.  «&  M.  6 :  203.     C.  915. 

149. 

Adam,  6 :  207.    C.  916.    125. 

Dan.  Bar.  6:809.     C.  958. 

147. 
Lie-expenditure.     Tnn  A.   5  :  260. 

C.  780. 
Lie-mark.     Fust,  6  :  378.     C.  984. 
Lies.     Sor.  1 :  256.     C.  99.     260. 
R.   &    B.   3:11.      C.  418. 

189. 
R.   &    B.   3:29.      C.  426. 

49. 
R.    &   B,   3:369,     C.  558. 

266. 
R.   &  B.  3:395.     C.  569. 

40. 
R.   &  B.  3:406.     C.  573. 

222 

R.   &' B.   3:414.     C.  576. 

262. 
R.   &  B.   3:471.     C.  599. 

262. 
Chris.-Eve,  4:15.     C.  321. 

264. 

Ari.  A.  5 :  156.     C.  651. 

Pacch.5:321.    C.  803.    131. 

Geo.  B.  D.  6  :  326.     C.  964. 

264. 
Chas.   A.   6:363,      C.   978. 

169. 

Fust,  6 :  382.     C.  986.     196. 

Lied.    St.  Mart.  5:354,     C.  815. 


INDEX 
Life. 


49. 


C. 


Liegeman.     Dan.  Bar.  6:  310 

9.").S. 
Life.     Pau.  1:4.     C.  3.     269. 

Pau.  1 :  13.     C.  7.     89. 

Pau.  1 :  22.     C.  10.     260. 

Para.  1 :  44.     C.  19.     29. 

Para.  1 :  49.     C.  21.    260. 

Sor.  1 :  254.     C.  99.     269. 

Sor.  1 :  279.     C.  108.     141. 

Sor.  1 :  315.    C.  123.    272. 


401 


Life 

Sor.  1 :  316.     C.  123.     47. 
Toccata,     2:35.       C.    175. 

220. 
Old    Pict.    2:41.      C.   177. 

284. 
Saul,  2  :  52.     C.  181.     215, 
In  Three  D.  2:81.     0,192. 

236. 
Last    R.    2 :  279,      C.   267, 

72. 
Last    R.    2:280.      C.   208. 

239. 
Flight,     2:298.       C.    275. 

69. 
Holy-C.    2:319.      C.  282. 

41. 
Luria,2:383.     C.307.   126. 
R.    &    B.  3:73,      C.  443, 

44- 
R.  &B.  3:85.     C.  447. 
R.    &   B.   3:99.      C.   453. 

132. 
R.   &  B.  3:105.     C.  456. 

63. 
R.   &   B.   3:115.      C.  459. 

253. 
R.   &   B.   3:217.      C.  501. 

131. 
R.   &  B.   3:244.     C.  511. 

59- 
R.   &   B.   3:250.     C.  514. 

187. 
R.   <fe  B.  3:274.      C.  523. 

84. 
R.   &   B.  3:311.     C:  537, 

213. 
R.   «fe  B.  3:387.     C.   566. 

214. 
R.   &  B.  3:394.      C.  568. 

128. 
R.   &   B.  3:396.     C.   570. 

83. 
R.   &   B.  3:455.     C.  593. 

89. 
Eas.-Day,  4:41.      C.    330. 

277. 
Andrea,     4:86.       C.     347. 

140. 
St.    Prax.   4:89.      C.   348. 

57- 
Bishop  B.  4:93.     C.  350. 

114. 
Cleon,4:118.     C.  359.    188. 
Cleon,4:120.     C.  360.    122. 
Cleon,4:122.     C.361.   154. 

241. 
In    a    B.   4:142.      C.   368. 

29. 


Life 
Life. 


INDEX 

C.   370, 
C.    376, 


Life's 


In  a   B.   4:146 

226. 
J.    Lee,    4:164. 

146. 
Too  Late,  4 :  179.     C.  381, 

63. 
Death  in  D.  4 :  196.     C.  387. 

146. 
Youth  &  A.  4 :  219.     C.  396. 

267. 
Baku.     4:294.      C.     614. 

152. 
Prince  H.  4 :  353.     C.  691. 

175. 

Fifine,  4  :  395.     C.  708.    20. 

Eed  Cott.  5:28.     C.  746. 

253. 
Red  Cott.'5:48.     C.  754. 

223. 
Red  Cott.  5:54.     C.  756. 

4. 
Red   Cott.   5:96.      C.   773. 

215- 

Ari.  A.  5:240.     C.  681. 

At  the  M.  5 :  3,32.     C.  807. 

284. 
At  the  M.  5  :  334.     C  808. 

247. 
Pisgah  L  5:341.     C.  810. 

2C2. 

La  S.  6 :  62.     C.  853.    25. 

La  S.  6:63.     C.  853.     197. 

La  S.  6 :  66.     C.  855.    72. 

La  S.  6 :  70.     C.  856.     164. 

Ivkn,  6 :  137.     C.  884.     163. 

Ned    B.    6:147.      C.    890. 

257- 

Joch.  6 :  212.     C.  918.     140. 

EpU.  Fer.  6 :  28:3.     C.  946. 

43- 
Apol.  &  F.  6 :  292.     C.  951. 

259. 
Apol.  &  F.  6  :  293.     C.  951. 

191. 
Now,  6:  392;  7:8.     C.  988. 

164. 
Rev,    6:437;    7:108.      C. 

1006.  266. 

Rev.    6:4;i9;     7:112.       C. 

1007.  147. 

R.  Brown.  C.  947.     269. 

— Epitaph,  C.  948.     108. 

Life-aUotment.    La  S.  6 :  72.     C 

857. 
Life-hereft.     Mul6y.  6:165.      C. 

898. 
Life-blood.    R.  &  B.  3:211.     C. 


498.     85. 


Life-blood-like.   Baku.  4:  322.    C. 

(i25. 
Life-breath.    Sor.  1 :  315.     C.  123. 

135- 
Life-breath.    Sor.  1 :  315.     C.  123. 

135. 
Life-career.    Prince  H.  4 :  336.    C. 

684. 
Life-chance.     R.  &  B.  3:  3^5.     C. 

557.     108. 
Life-crimson.    Forgiv.  5 :  365.     C. 

819. 
Life -exercise.     Red  Cott.  5:48. 

C.  754. 
Life-experience.     Fr.  Fu.  6:334. 

C.  »57. 
Life-gift.     Apol.  &  F.  C :  294.     C. 

952. 
Life  -  interest.     Red  Cott.  5 :  89. 

C.  770. 
Life-like.     Bea.  Sig.  6 :  418  ;  7 :  70. 

C.  999. 
Life -long.     Old  Pict.  2:40.     C. 
177.     255. 

R.  &  B.  3:218.     C.  501. 

129. 

Baku.     4:2.S0.        C.     609. 

214. 

Ari.    A.    5:135.      C.    642. 

216. 

Ari.    A.    5:171.      C.    656. 

79. 

Ber.  de  M.  6 :  296.     C.  952. 

183. 
Life -path.     Ari.  A.  5:191.     C. 

(364. 
Life-released.    Ari.  A.  5  :  136.     C. 

643. 
Life-size.    R.  &  B.  3:323.     C, 

542.    75. 
Life-spark.    Chas.  A.  6 :  359.     C. 

977. 
Life  -  springs.     Para.   1:121.      C 

48. 
Life-stake.    R.  &  B.  3:442.     C. 

588.     258. 
Life-stream.    Ned  B.  6 :  147.     C. 

890. 
Life-time's.     Now,  6:  392;   7:8. 

C.  988.     149. 
Life-tree.     Red  Cott.   5:77.      C. 

765. 
Life's.    Old  Pict.  2:40.     C.  111. 
162. 

R.   &    B.    3:46.      C.  432. 

279. 

R.   &    B.  3:406.      C.  573. 

222. 


402 


Life's 


INDEX 
C.  813 


Lion-color 


Life's.    Nnmph.  5:348 

48. 

Joch.  Cm  228.     C.  <)2r,.    282. 

Prol.  Fer.  6 :  240.     C.  1)29. 

133. 
Chris.  Sm.  6 :  317.     C.  9(31. 

127.     242. 
Life's-prize,     Pietro,   6 :  175.      C. 

Lives.     By  Fire.  2:66.     C.  187. 

215. 

Ari.A.5:129.  C.640.    141. 

L9,  S.  6 :  62.     C.  853.     208. 

Lifetime.     Red  Cott.   5:33.      C. 

748.     112. 
Ari.    A.    5:160.      C.    652. 

197. 
Lift.    R.   &    B.   3:42.      C.  430. 

136. 
Fra  Lippo,  4 :  78.     C.  344. 

81. 

Fifine,4:412.    0.718.   228. 

Red    Cott.    5:3.      C.   737. 

30. 
Rev.    6:439;    7:  110.      C. 

1U06.     73. 
Light.     Para.  1 :  35.     C.  15.     172. 

Luria,  2 :  387.     C.  309.     56. 

R.   &  B.  3:257.     C.  517. 

91. 
R.   &  B.  3:278.      C.  525. 

209. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  395.     C.  569. 

Red    Cott.   5:2.      C.  737. 

116. 

Bifur.  5 :  347.     C.  812.    45. 

La  S.  6:  58.     C.  851.    70. 

Ixion,  6  :  211.     C.  918.  209. 

Light-beariug.    Agam.  6 :  16.     C 

83(i. 
Light -graven.     Sor.   1:202.      C. 

78. 
Light-haired.    King  V.  1:388.    C. 

153. 
Light-hearted.     Pau.  1 :  12.     C.  6. 

Sor.  1 :  197.     C.  76.     238. 

Light-heartedness.  Druses,  2  :  115. 

C.  204. 
Light-of-love.     R.  &    B.  3:202. 

C.  495. 
Light-skirts.    R.  &  B.  3 :  199.     C. 

493. 
Lighting-up.    R.&B.  3:119.    C. 

461.     107. 
Lightning-like.    R.  &  B.   3:438. 

C.  586. 
Lightning-quick.       Clive,    6:162. 
C.  896. 


Lightning-spear.    R.  &  B.  3:  467. 

C.  597. 
Lightning-swift.    Ivkn,  6 :  137.    C 

884. 
Lightsome.    Red  Cott.  5 :  16.     C 

742. 
Likable.    Red  Cott.  5:2.     C.  737. 

233. 
Like-minded.     Balau.  4:264.     C. 

602. 
Lilied.    R.&B.  3:1.     C.  414. 
Lily.     Straf.  1:176.     C.  67.     91  • 

Pippa,  1:330.    C.  130.    251. 

R.    &   B.    3:76.      C.    444. 

152. 
Lily-colored.    Inn  A.  5:267.     C. 

783. 
LUy-flowers.    R.  &  B.  3:1.     C. 

414. 
Lily-like.    R.&B.  3: 113.    C.459. 
Lilv-limbed.    Fr.Fu.  6:331.     C. 

966. 
LUy-scented.    R.  &  B.  3:  260.    C. 

51.S. 
Lilv-strangled.     Ger.  de  L.  6 :  349. 

C.  97;!. 

Lily-white.     Prince  H.  4 :  342.     C. 

Limit-line.     Red  Cott.  5:2.      C. 

737.     269. 
Limneth.      R.   &  B.  3:321.      C. 

541.     287. 
Linden-flower-time-long.     Sor.  1 : 

241.     C.  93. 
Line.   A  Blot,  2 :  152.    C.  219.    198. 
Lines.     Last   R.   2:280.     C.  268. 
239. 

Andrea,  4:  85.    C.  346.    56. 

Lineage.    R.&B.  3: 146.     C.472. 

285. 
Linen.    R.&B.  3:137.     C.  469. 

188. 
L'Ingegno's.    Red  Cott.  5 :  49.   C. 

754. 
Linger.     King  C.  1 :  412.     C.  162. 

61. 
Lingers.    R.  &  B.  3  :  412.     C.  576. 

130- 
Lingot.    R.  &  B.  3:11.     C.  418. 

261. 
Link.    R.&B.  3:  96.     C.  452.   28. 
Lion.     Para.  1 :  119.     C.  47.     209. 
Dan.  Bar.  6 :  309.     C.  957. 

212 

Lion-brave.  "  R.   &  B.  3:68.     C. 

441. 
Lion-color.    Chris. -Eve,  4:5.     C 

318. 


403 


Lion-featured 


INDEX 


Log-house-thatch 


Lion-featured.      King    V.   1 :  370, 

('.  ]4<;. 

Lion-tlag.    Joch.  6:216.     C.  920. 
Lioii-guarder.    Balau.  4 :  273.     C 

6(«i. 
Lion-Uke.    Inn  A.  5 :  294.     C.  794. 

io8. 
Lion-monster.    Ari.  A.  5 :  192.    C 

664. 
Lion-stag-and-spider.    Shah  A.  6 : 

243.     C.  931. 
Lion-tenant.     Ari.  A.  5 :  189.     C. 

664. 
Lion's.   Karsh.4:70.  C.  340.   log. 
Lion's-crine.    Sor.  1 :  249.     C.  97. 
Lip.     Pan.  1:2.     C.  2.     170. 

Para.  1 :  IKi.     C.  4(i.     217. 

Waring,  2 :  270.   C.  264.   99. 

Light  W.  2:277.     C.   267. 

182. 
R.   &    B.   3:84.      C.  447. 

199. 
Lip-edge.    Agam.  6:  25.     C.  839. 
Lip-flower.     Ari.  A.   5:103.      C. 

630. 
Lips.    Para.  1:55.     C.  23.    51. 
-R.  &    B.   3:68.      C.  441. 

181. 
R.   &   B.  3:215.     C.  500. 

168. 
R.   &   B.   3:429.     C.  582. 

167. 
Epil.PiUar,6:271.     C.942. 

30. 
Geo.  B.  D.  6:  324.     C.  903. 

135. 

Fust,  6  :  368.     C.  980.    284. 

Liquor.    R.  &  B.  3  :  354.     C.  553. 

195- 
Literary.     Two  Poets,  6 :  100.     C. 

868.     88. 
Literators.    Two  Poets,  6 :  95.     C 

_iH}6.     75. 
Litigation-itch.      Ari.   A.    5  :  167. 

C.  655. 
Little.    R.  &  B.  3:337.     C.  547. 
223. 

Balau.  4:296.    C.  615.    161. 

Prince  H.  4:354.     C.  691. 

273. 
Little-ease.    Chas.  A.  6 :  363.     C. 

978. 
Little-in-the-fields.      Ari.    A.    5 : 

119.    c.  (;3(). 

Little-finger's.     Inn  A.  5  :  267.    C. 

783. 
Littleness.    R.   &  B.  3:385.     C. 

565.    203. 


Littleness.    Balau.  4:312.   C.  021. 

250. 
Live-dead.    Joch.  6 :  233.     C.  927. 
Live.     Para.  1 :  53.     C.  22. 

Before,  2:86.    C.  193.    223. 

Gram.  Fuu.  2 :  313.     C.  280. 

126. 

R.   &   B.  3:385.     C.  565. 

144. 

R.&B.  3:403.   C.572.  45. 

Lives.     Sor.  1 :  222.     C.  86.     275. 

R.   &  B.  3:476.     C.  601. 

232. 

Chris.  Sm.  6 :  313.     C.  959. 

131. 

Ger.  de  L.  6:  352.     C.  974. 

49. 

Fust.  6 :  380.     C.  985.     131 . 

Lived.     Para.  1 :  94.     C.  37.    98. 

Sor.  1 :  308.     C.  120.     87. 

Gondola,    2  :  269.      C.   264. 

52. 

Chas.  A.  6 :  361.      C.  977. 

.53. 
Liver-wing.     De   Gus.   2 :  45.      C. 

179. 
Liver-worried.    Red  Cott.  5:8.    C 

739. 
Living.     La  S.  6:53.     C849.    84. 
Lizard-limb.    Ari.  A.  5 :  118.     C, 

635. 
Load.     La  S.  6 :  69.     C.  856.    220. 

Apol.  &  F.  6 :  288.     C.  949. 

138. 
Loaded.      R.    &    B.  3:442.      C. 

588.     258. 
Loadstone.    R.  &  B.  3:331.     C 

544.     240. 
Loam-and-roughcast-work.       Sor. 

1:285.     cm. 
Loathe.     Dev.   6:431;    7:93.     C. 

1003.     134. 
Loatlisome.    King  C.  1 :  397.     C. 

156.     3. 
Lob-worm.    Pippa,  1:364.    (7.144. 
Locked.     Pict.  Ig.  4 :  73.     C.  341. 

37- 
Locking-up.    Inn  A.   5:  277.     C. 

787.     256. 
Locust-flesh.    Saul,  2:49.    C180. 
Loeusta's.     R.  &  B.  3:161.     C. 

478. 
Lode-star.    Pau.  1:8.     C.  5. 
Lofty.  _  Sor.  1 :  221.     C.  86.    88. 
Lofty-lineaged.    Balau.  4:311.    C. 

(i21. 
Log-house-thatch.   Sor.  1 :  208.    C. 

80. 


404 


Logic 


INDEX 

C.  470. 

5 :  123. 

C. 


Loosed 


Logic.    R.  &  B.  3:140. 

219. 
Logic-chopping.     Ari.   A.   5: 

C.  tJoS. 
Logic-throw.    R.  &  B.  3 :  2S4. 

527. 
London.    R.  &B.3:10.     C.  418. 

R.    &  B.   3:18.      C.  421. 

21. 

Touch,  C.  910. 

R.  Browii,  C.  947.     269. 

London-pride.      Red   Cott.   o :  11. 

C.  740.  _ 
Londres-district,    Red  Cott.  5 :  11. 

C.  740. 
Loneliness.     Pan.  1:5.     C.  4.     90. 
Long-cramped.    Last  R.  2:279.   C. 

2G7. 
Long-craved.     Two  Poets,   0 :  87. 

C.  .Sti-S.     95- 
Long-disused.     Inn  A.  5 :  283.     C. 

789. 
Long-drawn.    R.  (feB.3:344.     C. 
549.     268. 

R.  &  B.  3:442.      C.  588. 

72. 
Long-ears.     Inn  A.  5:  302.    C.  79(i. 
Long-forgotten.    Para.  1 :  113.    C. 

45. 
Long-kept.      Druses,   2 :  103.      C. 

200.     217. 
Long-laughed-over.   Inn  A.  5 :  315. 

C.  802. 
Long  -  limbed.     Red  Cott.   5:29. 

C.  747. 
Long-necked.     Camel  -  D.  G :  258. 

C.  937. 
Long-nosed.     R.  &  B.  3:  122.     C. 

4G2.     113. 
Long-past.     Clive,  6:155.     C  893. 

138. 
Long-pent.     Old  Pict.  2 :  44.     C. 

178. 
Long-planned.    In  a  B.  4: 135.    C. 

Long-sought.    Rev.  6 :  436 ;  7 :  lOG. 

C.  1005. 
Long-suspended.      Balau,  4:286. 

C.  I  ill. 
Long-teeming.     Fust,  6 :  373.     C. 

982. 
Long-used.     Ari.  A.  5 :  182.     C 

661. 
Longs.     One  Word,    4 :  125.     C. 

3ti2. 
Longed-for.    Straf.  1:131.     C.50. 
Longer.    R.  «&  B.  3:  301.     C.  533. 

178. 


Longer-lived.    Ari.  A.  5 :  236.     C. 

679. 
Longest-winded.    R.  &  B.  3:468. 

C.  598. 
Longfellow.     Sludge,   4 :  255.     C. 

411. 
Longing.     Inap.  6 :  400  ;  7 :  26.    C. 

991.     69. 
Look.    Lovei's' Q.  2:30.     C.  173. 

199. 
R.   &  B.  3:417.     C.  578. 

105. 
R.   &  B.  3:425.     C.  581. 

193. 
Chris.-Eve,  4:19.     C.  323. 

69. 

Rudel,  4:123.     C.  361.     7. 

Ben  Ezra,  4: 190,     C.  385. 

268. 

Fifine,4:415.    C.  719.    249. 

Fifine,  4:432.    C.  729.    268. 

Crist.  &  M.  6 :  205.     C.  915. 

73- 
Ber.  de  M.  6 :  299.     C.  954. 

Inap.  i; :  400  ;  7 :  27.    C.  991. 

181. 
Look-out.    Sludge,  4 :  242.    C.406. 
Looks.    Any  Wife,  2 :  70.     C.  188. 

202. 
Soul's  Tr.  2 :  344.     C.  292. 

228. 
R.   &   B.    3 :  20.      C.  422. 

252. 
Epil.  Melon-S.  6  :  242.     C. 

930.     204. 
Looked.    My  Last  D.  2 :  233,     C. 

252.     139. 
Stat.  &  B.  2 :  322.     C.  284. 

150- 
R.   &  B.  3  :  233.     C.  507. 

176. 

J.  Lee,  4: 162.    C.376.  149. 

Looked-for.      Luria,  2  :  371.      C. 


303. 


c. 


Lookers-on.    Dan.  Bar,  6 :  308 

957.     250. 
Looking-ofF.    Para.  1 :  76.     C.  31, 
Loop.    Stat,  &  B.  2 :  323.     C.  284. 

107. 
Loop-hole.     R.   &  B.  3:95,     C. 

451. 
Loose-skinned.  'R.&B,  3:  28.    C. 

425.     83. 
Loose  -  thonged.      Protus,  2 :  320. 

C.  283. 
Loosed.    Ari.  A,  5  :  140,     C.  644. 

279. 
405 


Loosely-guarded 


INDEX 


Love 


Loosely-Guarded.    Sludge,  4 :  24G. 

C.  4U.S. 
Lord.   R.&B.3:m3.    C.  491.  32. 
Lords-day.     Straf.  1 : 1.57.     C.  tjt). 
Lord-aiid-lady-ship.  K.  &  B.  3 :  42. 

C.  431. 
Lord-suitors.    R.  &B.3:116.     C. 

4(i<». 
Lordling.     R.   &   B.  3:108.      C. 

4o7.     49. 
Lordship  -  paramount.        Lin    A. 

5 :  292.     C.  792. 
Lore.    DisAl.  4:176.    C.  380.    83. 
Lorenzo.     R.  &  B.  3  :  3.     C.  415. 
Lorgnette-stare.    Red  Cott.  5 :  23. 

C.  745. 
Lory.     Gondola,  2 :  267.     C.  263. 
Lose.     One  Way,  2:76.     C.   190. 
20. 

R.  &B.3:317.    C.o39.  53. 

Bishop  B.  4:109.     C.  356. 

137- 

Ari.  A.  5: 160.   C.  652.  284. 

Ivkn,  6 :  135.     C.  883.     22. 

Ger.  de  L.  6 :  346.     C.  971. 

205. 
Loses.    R.  &  B.  3:292.     0.530. 

50. 
Losel.    R.  &  B.  3 :  168.     C.  481. 
Loss.     Luria,  2 :  :3G7.     C.301.    50. 
Death  in  D.  4 :  202.     C.  390. 

48. 
Losses.     Rev.   6:436;  7:105.     C. 

1(X)5.     2. 
Lost.    Pippa,  1 :  341.     C.  134.    3- 
Waring,    2:270.      C.    264. 

149. 
Waring,    2:275.      C.    266. 

238. 

Karsh.  4:  67.     C.  339.     39. 

In  a  B.  4: 14.5.    C.  .369.   289. 

Death  in  D.  4 :  193.     C.  386. 

204. 
Red  Cott.   5:41.      C.   752. 

12. 

HerT^,5:358.   C.  816.    170. 

Mary  W.   6:206.     C.   916. 

290. 
Lost-profile.      Fifiiie,  4:400.      C. 

711. 
Lot.    Para.  1 :  34.     C.  15.     278. 

Ari.  A.  5 :  155.   C.  650.   270. 

Lotte's.    Two  Poets,  6:115.     C. 

874. 
Lond.    Pippa,  1:352.   C  139.    66. 
Loudon.     Straf .  1 :  132.     C.  51. 
Louis  Onze.     Fifine,  4:389.      C. 
705. 


Louis'  -  worth.     Red  Cott.  5 :  37. 

C.  750. 
Louk^ria.    Ivkn,  6 :  132.     C.  881. 
Loured.    Eas.-Dav,  4 :  39.    C.  329. 
Lout-lord.    R.&B.3:82.    C.  446. 
Louvre.    R.  &  B.  3 :  2.     C.  415. 
Love.     Pau.  1:25.     C  11.     lOi. 

Para.  1 :  41.     C.  17.    40. 

Para.  1 :  80.     C.  32. 

Para.  1 :  103.     C.  41.     92. 

Pippa,  1:331.    C.  130.    180. 

212. 

Pippa,  1 :  348.    C.  137.    103. 

Flower's,  2 :  9.  C.\m.   235. 

Crist.  2  :  18.     C.  169.     141. 

Said,  2  :  48.     C.  180.     75. 

Saul,  2  :  67.     C.  187.     231. 

Anv  Wife,  2  :  68.     C.  187, 

68. 
Anv  Wife,  2 :  69.     C.   188. 

29. 
Guard.  Ang.  2 :  89,     C.  194. 

285. 

A  Blot,  2: 156.  C.221.   117. 

A  Blot,  2:161.    C.  22:!.    24. 

SouFs  Tr.  2  :  352.     C.  295. 

27. 
R.   &    B.   3:15.      C.  420, 

134- 
R.    &   B.    3:24.      C.   424. 

184.     242. 
R.    &    B.   3:158.     C,   477. 

201. 
R.   &   B.  3:215.     C.  500. 

73- 
R.   &   B.  3:232.     C.  507. 

103. 
R.   &   B.   3:240.     C.  510. 

"3. 
R.   &   B.  3:266.     C.  520. 

103. 
R.   &  B.  3:277.      C.  524. 

86. 
R.   &  B.   3:337.     C.  547, 

267. 
R.   &  B.  3:386.     C.  565. 

218. 
— R.   &  B.  3:434.     C.  585. 

133. 
R.   •Sc  B.  3:435.     C.  585. 

78. 
Chris.-Eve,  4:36.     C.  328. 

163. 
Eas.-Day,   4:53,      C,    334. 

159. 
Fra  Lippo,  4 :  75.     C.  342. 

81. 
Li  a  B.  4 :  139,     C,  367.    I. 


406 


I 


Love 


INDEX 


Lover 


Love.    In  a  B.  4: 143.    C.  T.S.    98. 
Ben  Ezra,  4 :  18'J.     C.  38.5. 

103. 
Death  in  D.  4 :  196.     C.  .'5K7. 

224. 
Death  in  D.  4 :  199.     C.  389. 

31. 
Deaf  &  D.  4  :  21G.     C.  395. 

47- 

Sludge,  4 :  238.  C.404.  134. 

Prince   H.  4  :  34(j.     C.  <J87. 

242. 
Prince  H.  4:367.     C.  696. 

79. 

Fifine,  4  :  439.    C.  733.    233. 

Ari.   A.  5:162.       C.   653. 

281. 
Ari.   A.   5  :  179.       C.   660. 

197. 

Inn  A.  5:  252.    C.  777.   225. 

Inn  A.  5  :  285.     C.  790.    72. 

Inn  A.  5  :  290.    C.  792.    223. 

Inn  A.  5:306.    C.  798.    167. 

Two  Poets,  6  :  101.     C.  868. 

221 

Crist.'&  M.  6  :  203.     C.  915. 

149. 
Cherries,   6  :  264.      C.   939. 

140. 
Epil.  Cher.  6 :  265.     C.  939. 

223. 
Plot  -  C.   6  :  265.       C.   939. 

251. 

Pillar,  6  :  269.     C.  941.     54. 

127.     192. 

PiUar,6:270.    C.941.    127. 

Epil.   Bean-St.   6:282.     C. 

94{).     33. 

Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  322.     C.  963. 

290. 

Bea.    Sig:.  6 :  415 ;  7  :  64.   C. 

997.     82. 
Love-abyss.    Reph.  6 :  434 ;  7 :  100. 

C.  1004. 
Love-apple.   Englishm.  2 :  258.    C. 
260. 

Fifine,  4 :  417.     C.  721. 

Love-besprinkled.    Inn  A.  5 :  274. 

C.  785. 
Love-bliss.     Crist.  2 :  19,     C.  170. 
Love-breath.    Pau.  1 :  22.     C.  10. 

171. 
Love-charm.    Ari.  A.  5 :  224.     C 

675. 
Love-fit.    R.&B.3:427.     C.582. 

83. 
Love-freaks.    Dis  Al.  4 :  175.     C. 
380. 


Love-gift.     Ceneiaja,  5 :  375.     C 

823._ 
Love-intrigue.     R.   &   B.   3 :  370. 

C.  559. 
Love-laden.    R.  &  B.  3  :  168.     C. 

481. 
Love-lore.     Colombe,  2:223.     C. 

248. 
Love-lures.    R.  «fe  B.  3:  252.     C. 

514.     151. 
Love-maddened.     Rosny,   6  :  391 ; 

7  :  5.     C.  987. 
Love-making.    R.  &  B.  3 :  223.   C. 
503.     52. 

Epil.    Cherries,  6 :  265.     C. 

939. 
Love-romance.    Forgiv.  5 :  361.  C 

818. 
Love-scrapes.    R.  &B.3:l26.    C. 

464. 
Love-transformed.     Balau.  4  :  325. 

C.  626. 
Love-wards.    Ari.  A.  5:109.     C. 

()32. 
Love-way.     Crist.  2  :  19.     C.  170. 
Love-worthy.    Mihrab,  6  :  255.    C. 

935.     175. 
Love's.     Para.  1:49.     C.20.    126. 

Time's  R.  2  :  252.     C.  258. 

42. 

Death  in  D.  4 :  194.     C.  386. 

241. 

Death  in  D.  4 :  194.     C.  387. 

242. 

Mary   W.  6  :  20G.      C.  916. 

290. 
Loves.    Chris.-Eve,  4 :  17.    C.  322. 

175. 

Red  Cott.  5 :  18.    C.  743.  91. 

Loved.    A  Blot,  2 :  157.     C.   222. 

290. 
Soul's  Tr.  2 :  343.     C.  291. 

148. 
Chris.-Eve,  4:9.      C.  319. 

93- 
One  Word,  4  :  125,     C.  362. 

45- 
Loveless.      Chris.-Eve,  4 :  7.      C 

318.     150. 
Chris.-Eve,  4:25.     C.  325. 

M5- 
Lovelily.    Flight,  2  :  308.     C.  278. 
Loveliness.     Pau.  1 :  5.*    90. 
Lover.     In   a  Y.  2:83.      C.  192. 

143. 

Joeh.  6 :  213.     C.  919.    7. 

Bad  D.  IV.  6  :  398  ;  7  :  23. 

C.  9'.H).     42. 


407 


Lover-like 


Lover-like.    Mar.  Rel.  G :  120 

87(>. 
Lover's.    R.  &  B,  3: 121.     C.  4()2. 

212. 

Lover's  -  utterance.       Bea.    Sig. 

(J :  413 ;  7 :  CO.     C.  997. 
Lovers,     Pippa,   1:331.      C.  130. 
i8o. 

By  Fire.  2:  65.     C.  187.    87. 

E.   &  B.   3:16.       C.  421. 

261. 

In  a  B.  4: 134.    C.365.  134. 

Lovesome.     R,  &  B.  3:279.     C. 

525.     77. 
Loving.    Red  Cott.  5 :  3.     C.  737. 
132. 

Inn  A.  5:258.    C.  779.    282. 

Rev.    6:436;    7:105.       C. 

1005. 
Loving  -  husband  -  like.    R.  &  B. 

3:34.     C.  427. 
Loving-ones.      Balau.   4 :  283.     C. 

610. 
Lovingest.    Pippa,  1 :  331.    C.130. 

143. 
Low.     Sor.  1 :  221.     C.  86.    88. 

Gram.  Fun.  2 :  312.     C.  280. 

55. 

R.  &B.3:291.   C.5.30.   51. 

Inn  A.  5:  285.    C.  790.    109. 

Low-and-ugsome.    Ari.  A.  5 :  130. 

C.  641. 
Low-bent.     Fust,  6 :  378.     C.  984. 
Low-browed.    R.&B.3:204.     C. 

495. 
Low-hung.    Inn  A.  5:  256.    C  770. 
Low-lying.    R.   &   B.  3:148.     C. 

473.     33. 
Low-pulsed.     Andrea,  4 :  84.     C. 

346. 
L6well.    Sludge,  4  :  255.     C.  411. 
Lower.    Cleon,  4 :  120.   C.  360.    72. 
Lowliest.     Ari.  A.  5: 133.     C641. 
Lowlihead.     Pope  &  N.   6 :  402  ; 

7  :  33.     C.  092. 
Lowness.     Red   Cott.   5:36,      C. 

750.     263. 
Lote-tree.     Ger,  de  L.  6  :  346.     C. 

971. 
Loyalty.    R.&B.3:383.     C.564, 

229. 
Loys.    Druses,  2  :  102.     C.  199. 
Lozenge  -  brickwork.       R.   &   B. 

3:11.     C.  419.     178. 
Lubricate.    R.   &  B.  3:452,     C. 

592,     185. 
Luca  Gaddi.     Pippa,  1 :  334.     C. 

13l 


INDEX  Mace 

C.    Lucidity.     R.   «fe  B.  3 :  407.     C. 
Red  Cott.  5:38. 


Lucidity. 

574.     283. 
Lucie  Steiuer 

C.  751. 

Luck.    Pietro,  6 :  172.    C.901.    58, 
Lucre.     Ponte  A.   6:407;    7:46, 

C.  994.     131. 
Lucrezia.    R.    &   B.   3:452.      C 
.592. 
Andrea,  4  :  83.     C.  346. 


Lucumons.    Eas.-Day,  4  :  41,     C. 

.330. 
Lucy.    Straf .  1 : 1.36.     C.  52. 
Luigi.     Pippa,  1 :  352.     C.  139. 
Luitolfo.     Soul's  Tr.   2:337.     C. 

289. 
Lukewarm.     Fil.  Bald.  5 :  388,    C. 

827.     73. 
Lurcher.     Fust,  6  :  374.     C.  982. 
Lure.     Gram.  Fun.  2 :  312.    C.  280. 

Chris.  Sm.  6  :  312.     C.  959, 

159. 
Lured.    R.  &  B.  3:75.     C.  444. 
142. 

R.  &  B.  3:315.     C.  539, 

150. 

R.tfeB.3:368.    C.568.  95. 

Lurking-place.     R.    &  B.   3:372, 

C.  5(;().    128. 

Lust-born.      Fr.   Fu.   6:332.      C, 


Red  Cott,  5 :  29, 


C. 
C. 


966. 
Lustihood. 

747. 
Lute-fashion.    Red  Cott.  5 :  7. 

739. 
Lute-strings.     Fra  Lippo,  4 :  75. 

C.  342.    230. 
Luther.    Twins,  2: 276.    0.266.   7. 
Luther's.    Para.  1 :  69.     C.  28. 
Luthers.     R.  &B.3:401.     C.  572. 
Lutwyche.    Pippa,  1 :  348.    C.  1-37. 
Luzern.    Red  Cott.  5:1.     C.  737, 

79- 
Lying.    R.  &   B.  3  :  89.     C.  449. 
261. 

R.   &  B.  3:413.     C.  576, 

215- 
Lynx-eye,     R,   &  B,  3:467.     C, 

597. 
Lynx-gift.    R,   &  B,  3:383,     C. 


5fi4. 
Lyric. 

ig8. 


153. 

Chris.  Sm.  6: 317. 


M 


C.961. 


Mace. 
172, 

408 


Fifine,    4:430.      C.    728. 


Machaon 


INDEX 


Malevolence 


Machaon.     Doctor,  6 :  184.    C.  907. 

91. 
Machine.    LaS.6:63,    C.  853.  6o. 
Macliinery.     Ben  Ezra,  4 :  190.     C. 

o85. 
Mad.     Para.  1:57.     C.  24.     196. 
R.    &    B.    3:61.      C.   438. 

22 

Worst,     4:171.       C.     378. 

149. 
Madame-mother.   Red  Cott.  5 :  50. 

C.  755. 
Maddened.    R,  &  B.  3:423.     C. 
580.     84. 

Chris.  Sm.  6:  315.     C.  9G0. 

192. 
Made-up.     R.   &  B.  3:165.      C. 

480.     85. 
Madhouse-inmates.    Inn  A.  5 :  307. 

C.  799. 
Madness.     Flight,  2  :  292.     C.  272. 

227 

R.  &'b.   3:287.      C.  528. 

244. 
Madonna's.    R.  &  B.  3 :  381,     C. 

5(53. 
Madrigals.    Two  Poets,  6 :  83.     C. 

801.     189. 
MadrUene.    Red  Cott.  5 :  15,     C. 

742, 
Mage-king's,     Druses,  2 :  111,     C 

203. 
Magisterial.     Sor.  1 :  270,     C.  105, 

12. 
Magnific.    Balau.  4 :  310.     C.  620. 

224. 
Magnolia-bell.     In  a  B.  4:150.    C. 

371. 
Maid -Moon.      Pan,    6:188,      C. 
909. 

Poetics,  6:393;    7:10.     C, 

988. 


Maiden-speech.    Inn  A.  5 :  264,  C 

782. 
Maigrot.     R.   &   B.  3:391,      C. 

567. 
Mailed,    R.  &  B.  3:  367.     C.  558. 

239. 
Mail  lard,    Paul   Desforges,      Two 

Poets,  6 :  92,     C.  865, 
Main-actor.    Ari,   A,   5 :  158.      C. 

651. 
Main-current.    R.&B,3:455,    C. 

593. 
Main-Fight.    Ari.  A.  5 :  230,     C. 

677. 
Main-force.    Ari.  A.  5:222.     C, 

674. 


Main-purchase.    Fifine,  4 :  395,   C. 

708, 
Main -road.       Iv.\n,    6:1.31.       C. 

881. 
Maiidand-seaport.    Balau.  4 :  265. 

C.  603. 
Maiuwaring.      Straf.    1:169.      C. 

()5. 
Maize  -  tuft.      Pippa,   1 :  359.      C 

141, 
Make,    R.  &  B.  3:387.     C.  566, 
165. 

R.   &  B.   3:424.     C.  581. 

163. 

Fifine,      4:415.       C.     719, 

156. 
Make-believe,    R.»feB.3:ll.     C. 
418.     189. 

R.   &  B.  3:249.     C.  513, 

209. 

Joch.  6 :  227.     C.  925.     7. 

Make-fancy.     Fr.  Fu.  6 :  339.     C. 

969, 
Make-pretence.    Fil.  Bald.  5  :  376. 

C.  824. 
Make-shift.       Para.    1:84.        C. 

34. 
Makes.     Childe  R.  2 :  334.     C.288. 
82. 

Prince  H.  4 :  338.     C.  684. 

157. 
Makers-see.       Sor.     1:259.        C. 


100. 


c. 


Makeshift.     R.  &  B.  3:383. 

5ti4.     213. 
Making.    R.  &  B.  3: 13.     C.  419, 
195. 

Ben  Ezra,  4 :  188,     C,  384, 

243. 
Malchus.     R.   &  B.   3:164 


479, 


Malcrais.     Two   Poets,  6:99. 

867.     272. 
Male-babe,     R,  &  B,  3:58, 

437, 
Male-Grissel.     R.  &  B.  3:  66. 

440. 
Male-Kirk^.     Ari.  A.  5  :  174. 

658, 
Male-lands.      By  Fire.  2:60. 

185.     282. 
Male-sapphires.    Saul,   2 :  49. 

180. 
Male-seat.     Again.  6 :  10.     C.  834. 
Male-stuff.     Joch.  6:  220.     C.  922. 

282. 
Malevolence.    R.  &B.3:179.     C. 

486.    56, 

409 


Malice 


INDEX 


MaUce.    R.  &  B.  3 :  221.     C.  502. 
258. 

Apol.  &  F,  6 :  286.     C.  949. 

46. 
Malignity.    Ber.  de  M.  6 :  298.    C. 

953.     155. 
Malingeriiif,'.     Fifine,   4 :  415.      C. 

7''0      222 
MaUeolable!    R.  &  B.  3:16.     C. 


1:262.      C.   102. 


421.     200. 
Mallows.     S( 

275- 
Malpichi.     R.   &  B.  3:246.      C. 

512. 
Mammoth -poem.     Pippa,  1:339. 

C.  134. 
Man.     Para.  1 :  73.     C.  30.     278. 

Para.  1 :  98,     C.  39.     206. 

Para.  1 :  118.     C.  47.     197. 

Para.  1 :  12U.     C.  48.     179. 

Sor.  1 :  2:30.     C.  89.     188. 

Old    Pict.   2:39.      C.   176. 

99- 
Old    Pict.   2:40.      C.  177. 

70. 

After,  2  :  87.     C.  194.     47. 

Liiria,  2  :  3(55.     C.  300.  177. 

Luria,  2  :  372.     C.  303.  240. 

R.    &    B.   3:39,      C.   429. 

208. 
R.   &    B.    3:87.      C.  448. 

R.    <fe    B.    3:88. 

261. 
R.   &  B,  3:171. 


71- 
R.   &  B.  3:295. 


C.  448. 

C.  482. 

C.  631. 

C.  548. 

C.  556. 

C.  565. 

C.  565. 

C.  5G6. 


^55- 
R.   &  B.   3:341. 

5- 
R.   &  B.  3:362. 

"5-  „ 
R.   &  B.  3:384, 

262. 
R.  &  B.  3:385. 

203. 
R.  &  B.  3:387. 

262, 
R.    c%   B.   3:390.      C.  567. 

108. 
R.  &  B.  3:397.     C.  570. 

93- 
R.  &  B.  3:418.     C.  578. 

59- 
R.   &  B.  3:425,      C.  581. 

205. 
R.  (fe  B,  3:434.     C.  585. 

80. 


Man. 


Man-needed 

R.  &   B.  3:471.     C.  599. 

242. 
ChrLs.-Eve,   4:8.      C.   318, 

144- 
Chris.-Eve,  4:15.     C.  321. 

35- 
Eas.-Day,    4  :  50.      C.   333. 


Bishop  B.  4  :  107,     C.  355. 

287. 

Cleon,4:119,     C.  360.   166. 

Cleon,4:120.     C.SCO.    123. 

Fifine,  4:  414.     C.  719.  117. 

Ari.    A.    5:227.      C.   675. 

270. 
Inu    A.    5:264.       C.    782. 

184. 

Joch.  6:221.     C.  985.     251. 

Sun,  6 :  250.     C.  9:33.     64. 

Camel-D.   6:259.      C.  937. 

Apol.  &  F.  6 :  294.     C.  951, 

132. 
Ber.  de  M.  6 :  298.     C.  953. 

266. 
Dan.  Bar.  6:300.     C.  954. 

245- 
Dan.  Bar.  6 :  304.     C.  956. 

95. 

Chris.  Sm.  6 :  317.     C.  961. 

170. 

Fr.    Fu.    6:335.      C.    967. 

194.     209.     235. 

Chas.   A.   6:362.      C.  978. 

139. 

Fust,  6 :  381.     C.  985.    251. 

Bea.  Sig.  6 :  415 ;  7 :  62.    C. 

9i)7.     161. 
Man -animalcule.     Fifine,  4:417. 

C.  721. 
Man-at-arms.     R .  &  B .  3  :  367.     C. 

558.     239. 
Man-bereaved.    Agam.  6 :  10.     C. 

834. 
Man-destroyer.    Agam.  6 :  45.     C, 

84(3. 
Man -fossil.      Pacch.   5:319.      C. 

803. 
Man-like.    Prince  H.  4:354.     C. 

cm.  _ 

Man -liquid.     Pacch.   5:319.      C. 

803. 
Man-mask.     Inn   A.    5:289.     C. 

791. 
Man-mutilating.     R.  &  B.  3 :  408, 

a  574. 
Man  -  needed.      Sun,   6 :  252.      C, 

934, 


410 


Man-part 


INDEX 


Man-part.    Sor.  1 :  231.     C.  8'J. 
Man-portion.    Sor.  1 :  230.     C.  89. 
Man-shaped.     Fifine,   4:403.      C. 

713. 
Man-slaxig-ht'rous.      Agam.   G:25. 

C.  S3!). 
Man-slave.     Ari.   A.  5 :  158.      C. 

(wl. 
Man's.    Para.  1 :  45.    C.  19.     163. 

Para.  1 :  119.     C:  47.     95. 

Sor.  1 :  227.     C.  88.     36. 

Another  W.  2  :  7G.     C.  190. 

289. 
Master  H.   2:95.     C.  19(5. 

292. 
R.   &  B.  3:385.     C.  5(35. 

161. 
R.  &   B.  3:387.     C.  5(j(3. 

71- 
R.   &  B.  3:425.     C.  581. 

205. 
Ai-i.  A.  5  :  131.       C.    641. 

257- 

Epil.  Paceh.  5 :  392.    C.  827. 

253. 

La  S.  6 :  57.     C.  851.     170. 

Sun,  6  :  251.     C.  934. 

Bean^t.   6 :  27G.       C.   944. 

176. 

Apol.  &  F.  6 :  289.     C.  950. 

279. 

Apol.  &  F.  6  :  293.     C.  951. 

127. 

Dan.  Bar.  6 :  309.     C.  958. 

17. 

Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  321.     C.  9(32. 

28. 

Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  322.     C.  9(53. 

Fust,  G:  381.     C.  985.     127. 

Man's -flesh.      Karsh.   4:64.      C. 

338 
Man's-Hell.   Agam.  6:  22.    C.  838. 
Man's-nature.    Druses,  2 :  139.    C. 

214. 
Man's-serviee.    R.&B.3:22.     C. 

423. 
Man's-shambles.   Agam.  6 :  32.    C. 

842. 
Man's-shame.    Ari.  A.  5 :  17G.     C. 

659. 
Man's-strength.     R.  .&  B.  3  :  384. 

C.  5(;4. 
Man's-truth,    Any  Wife,  2 :  69.    C. 

188.     199. 
Man's-way.     In  a   B.   4:137.     C. 

36(3. 
Man's-way-planning,    Agam.  6 :  4. 

C.  831. 


Mansionry 
C. 


Man's-work.    Ari.  A.  5 : 1(32 

(553.     282. 
Men.    Sor.  1 :  25(5.     C.  99.     244. 
Soul's  Tr.  2 :  338.     C.  289, 

92. 
R.   &  B.   3  :  24.      C.  424. 

195- 
R.   ct  B.  3:301.      C.  533. 

229. 

Bishop  B.  4:  111,  C357.  7. 

In  a   B.   4:133.       C.   3G4. 

143. 
In   a  B.   4:143.       C.   3(58. 

143. 

Balau.4:289.    C.612.    149. 

Red   Cott.   5:34.      C.   749. 

163. 
Forgiv.     5:363.       C.    818. 

210. 
Joeh.6:228.     C.  925.     161. 


Managed.    R.  &  B.  3: 199.    C.  493, 

133. 
Mande^olle,  Bernard  de.     Ber.  de 

M.  (5 :  2!)5.     C.  952. 
Mandrake-monster.      Ber.   de  M, 

6  :  298.     C.  953. 
Manhood's.     Two  Poets,  6 :  79.    C 

680.     7. 
Maniac.      Two  Poets,   6:90.      C. 

8(54.     202. 
Manikin.     R.  &B.3:4G8.    C.  597, 
Mankind.    Pau.  1:11.    C.  6.    252, 

Para.  1 :  83.     C.  34.  "  28. 

Sor.  1 :  2i)0.     C.  113.     loi. 

Soid's   Tr.  2 :  340.     C.  290, 

205. 

Soul's  Tr.  2:356.     C.  297, 

65. 

R.&B.3:477.    C.601.    10. 

Prince  H.  4 :  334.     C.  (583, 

137- 
Prince   H.  4 :  354.     C.  (591, 

273- 

Two  Poets,  6:  81,     C.  860. 

250. 
Manly-feminine.   Fifine,  4:  403.  C. 

713. 
Mamia-banquet.    R.  &  B.  3:295. 

C.  531. 
Mannaia.    R.  &  B.  3 :  30.     C.  426, 
Mannaia-machine.    R.  &  B.  3 :  422. 

C.  580. 
Manned.     R.  &  B.  3: 11.     C.  418, 
Manners  -  instructing.       Ari.    A. 

5 :  173.     C.  658. 
Manning.     R.  &  B.  3 :  11.     C.  418. 
^lansionry.     Ari,  A.   5 :  190.      C 

664. 


411 


Manufactures 


Manufactures.      R.  &   B.    3:440. 

C.  5S7.    213. 
Many.     Straf .  1 :  ISl.     C.  GO.     63. 

Lui-ia,  2  :  403.     C.  315.     184. 

Manj'-columned.     R.  &  B.  3:,')4(i. 

C.  55(1. 
Many-folded.     R.  &B.  3:30.     C. 

42(3.     133. 
Many  -  handed.      Caliban,   4 :  210. 

C.  393. 
Many-husbanded.    Agam.6:5.  C. 

832. 
Many-mindful.     Agam.  6:25.     C. 

839. 
Many-nooked.     Joeh.   6:226.     C. 

924, 
Many-slayers.     Agam.   6 :  15.     C. 

836. 
Manv-streamed.      Ari.  A.  5 :  190. 

C."6tU. 
Many-tattered.      Chris.-Eve,  4 :  2. 

C.  316. 
Many-tinkling.     Love,   2 :  26.     C. 

172. 
Map.     Chve,6:155.    C.893.    138. 
Maple-chamber.    Sor.   1 :  207.     C 

80. 
Maple-panelled.    Sor.  1:202,     C. 

78. 
Mar.     Para.  1 :  97.     C.  39,    284. 

One  Word,  4 :  126.     C.  362. 

159. 
Mars.    Childe  R.  2:  334.     C.  288. 

82. 
Maratta,  CavaHer.  R.  &  B.  3 :  293. 

C.  530. 
Marble.     Pan.  1 :  22.     C.IO.     171. 

Pippa,  1:344.    C.136.    139- 

R.    &  B.   3:248.      C.  513. 

160. 


INDEX  Marriage-prolusions 

Red  Cott.  5 :  10.     C. 


Marbles.  Bad  D.  III.  6 :  398  ;  7 :  21. 

C.  f>90.     139. 
Marbly.     St.  Prax.  4 :  90.     C.  349. 
Marc  Antonios.     Likeness,  4:  221. 

C.  397. 
Marcasite.      Colombe,  2:190.     C. 

235. 
March.    Lovers' Q,  2: 27.     C,172. 
46, 

Old   Pict.  2:37,      C.  176. 

61. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  362.     C.  556. 

March.     R.  &  B.  3:87.     C,  448, 


152. 
March-motive . 

C.  978. 
March  -  music, 

C.  978, 


Chas,  A,  6:363, 
Chas,  A.  6:363. 


March- tune. 

740. 
Marching.      Colombe,   2:215,     C. 

244.     85. 
Margherita.     R.&B.  3:260.     C. 

518. 
Margin-space,     Inn  A.  5 :  243,     C. 

ITS. 
Marinesque  Adoniad,     R.   &   B. 

3  :  196.     C.  492, 
Marino,    R.  «S;  B,  3 :  199.     C.  493. 

45- 
Marish.     Balau.  4  :  305.     C.  619. 
Marish-floor.     Sor.  1 :  216.     C.  84. 
Marital.    R.  &  B.  3 :  162.     C.  478. 

156. 
Marjoram-sprig.     R.   &   B.   3:8. 

C.  417. 
Mark.     Death  in  D.   4 :  204.     C. 
391.     197. 

Red  Cott.  5:88.     C.  770. 

201. 

Fust,  6:  380.     C,  985.     131. 

Marked.     Red  Cott.  5  :  41.    C.  752. 

12. 
Market-drudge.    Two  Cam.  6:  261, 

a  938. 
Market-ground.     Iv^n,  6 :  132.    C. 

881. 
Market-phrase.      Ari.   A.   5  :  147. 

C.  647. 
Mkrpha.     Ivkn,  6  : 1.36,     C.  883. 
Marquis.     Crist.  &  M.  6  :  202. 
Marriage.     Colombe,  2 :  214,      C. 
244.     143. 

R.    &   B.   3:251,     C.   514, 

64. 
R.  &  B.  3  :  368.     C.  5.58. 


Marriage-articles,     R.  &  B.  3  :  78, 

C.  445. 
Marriage-bed.    Ari.  A.  5  :  223,    C. 

674. 
Marriage-bond.    R.  &   B.  3:159, 

C.  477,     196. 
Marriage-case,     R,  &  B,  3:466, 

C.  o97. 
Marriage-care,    Agam,  6 :  22.     C. 

838. 
Marriage-chant.    Sor.  1 :  244.     C. 

94. 
Marriage-making.    R.  &  B.  3  :  278. 

C.  .525.     209. 
Marriage  -  mate.     Ari.  A.  5 :  189. 

C.  «J3. 
Marriage-oath.     R.   &  B.  3:317. 

C.  p39. 
Marriage-prolusions.    Agam.  6 : 5. 

C.  832. 
412 


Marriage-tree 


INDEX 


Matron-Twise 


Marriage-tree.    Inn  A.  5 :  270,     C. 

784. 
Marriage-vow.     R.   &   B.  3:291. 

C.  530. 
Married.      R.    &    B.   3:125.      C. 

4(i4.     II. 
Marry.    R.«feB.  3:278.     C.  525. 
io6.     195. 

Red  Cott.  5:14.     C.  742. 

241. 
Red  Cott.   5:82.     C.   7G7. 

lOI. 

Mars.     La  S.  6 :  56.     C.  850.     239. 
Marsh-born.     Ari.  A.  5  :  134.     C. 
(i42. 

Dan.  Bar.  6 :  305.     C.  956. 

Martha     Blount.       Epil.     Pacch. 

5  :  ;5!)3.     C.  829. 
Martin  Relph.    Mar.   Rel.  6:117. 

C.  875. 
Martm-fisher.     Fr.  Fu.  6 :  342.    C. 

970. 
Martinez.      R.  &   B.    3:460.      C. 

594. 
Martyr.      Sor.    1:316.       C.    123. 

47- 

R.   &    B.  3:233.     C.  507. 

42. 
Martyr-gash.    Holy-C.  2 :  319.     C. 

282. 
Martyr-maid.    R.&B.3:381.    C. 

.563. 
Martyr-mark.    R.&B.3:391.   C. 

567.     85. 
Marvel.      R.    &    B.    3:378.      C. 

562.     81. 
Marvels.    Ger.  de  L.  6:344.     C. 

971.    273. 
MarveUous.     R.&B.  3:428.     C. 

582.     170. 
Marzi- Medici.     R,   &  B.  3:234. 
C.  508. 

R.   &  B.  3:377.      C.  562. 

Mask.     Para.  1:121.     C.  48.    102. 

R.    &   B.  3:202.      C.   494. 

227. 

Worst,  4: 172.     C.  379.    73. 

Adam,     6:207.       C.     916. 

125. 
Mass.    Sor.  1 :  204.     C.  79.     34. 

Luria,2:404.     C.315.   164. 

Joeh.  6 :  228.     C.  925.     156. 

Mass-priest.     Colombe,  2 :  190.    C 

234. 
Mass-time.    Another  W.  2 :  76.    C 

liX). 
Massy-muscled.    Sor.  1 :  324.     C. 

126. 


Master.    Toccata,    2 :  36.    C.  175. 

249. 
R.   &  B.  3:187.     C.  489. 

177. 
Ben  Ezra,  4:188.     C.  384. 

284. 
Death  in  D.  4  :  203.     C.  390. 

154. 
Fifine,     4:441.         C.     734. 

233. 
Chris.  Sm.  6:  312.     C.  959, 


Fust,  6:380.     C.  985,     279. 

Master  -  chariot  -  pole.      Artemis, 

4 :  62.     C.  337. 
Master-mind.     Para.  1:51.     C.21. 

92. 
Master-net.     Chas.  A.  6.  359.     C. 

977.     169. 
Master-plaster.    Flight,  2 :  307,  C. 

278, 
Master  -  spring,     Sor.   1 :  268,      C. 

104. 
Master-squeeze.     R.  &   B.  3:63, 

C.  439.     108. 
Master-stroke.      R.  &   B.   3:291. 

C.  530.     153. 
Master-touch.    Ari.  A.  5 :  132.    C. 

641. 
Master-wind.    Luria,   2 :  400.      C 

314. 
Master-word.    Ari.  A.  5 :  241.     C. 

681, 
Master-work,     Ari.  A.  5:165.     C 

654,     120. 
Masters.     Ari.  A.  5 :  153.     C.  649, 
228, 

Bean -St,    6:277.     C.- 944, 

67. 
Masterfully-folded,    Inn  A.  5 :  287, 

C.  791. 
Masterless.    R.  &  B.  3:207.     C, 

496.     249. 
Mat -floor.     Ari.   A.   5:103.      C. 

(i-'iO.      242. 
Match.     Inn  A.   5:264.     C,  782. 
184.  , 

Ger.  de  L.  6 :  344.     (J.  971, 

273. 

Bea.  Sig.  6 :  415  ;  7  :  63.     C 

997.     157-    • 
Matches.      Red    Cott.    5:92.    C, 

771. 
Matin-prime.      Sib.    Schaf.   2:  10. 
C.  167. 

Eas.-Day,  4:40.     C.  330. 

Matron-wise.     R.  «S;B.  3:78,     C. 

444,     269, 


413 


Matter 


INDEX 


Meissonnier 


Matter.    R.  &  B.  3:  386.     C.  505. 
i6i. 

Chas.  A.  6:357.     C.  976. 

i6i. 
Matter-of-course.     Fifine,   4:407. 

C.  715. 
Mature.    J.  Lee,  4:160.     C.  375. 

289. 
Maufroy.      Colombe,   2 :  184.      C. 

232. 
Maw-crammed.     Beu  Ezra,  4 :  186. 

C.  3.S4. 
Mawkish.     Epil.  A.  6 :  440 ;  7 :  113. 

C.  1007.    226. 
MaxweU.     Straf.  1:167.     C.  64. 
May.    Sor.  1 :  222.     C.  m.     246. 

Red  Cott.   5:66.      C.   761. 

237. 
May-dawn.    Two  Poets,  6 :  80.     C. 

.S6(). 
Maj'-eves.    R.   &  B.  3:163,     C 

470. 
May-go-down.    Epil.  Pacch.  5 :  391. 
May-month.    Epil.  Pacch.  5 :  394. 

C.  829. 
May-nioon-month.    R.  &  B.  3 :  409. 

C.  575. 
May-morn.     Two  Poets,  6 :  77.     C . 

8.")9.     270. 
May  -  morns.      Two  Poets,   6 :  80. 

C.  860. 
May-night.    Red  Cott.  5 :  25.     C. 

745. 
May-rose.    Fifine,  4:395.     C.  709. 
May  -  wreaths.    Earth's  Im.  2 :  21. 

C.  170. 
Mazard.    Pacch.  5:319.     C.  803. 

71. 
Maze.     King  C.   1:400.      C.  157. 

20. 
Meadow-ground.     Red  Cott.  5 :  3. 
C.  737. 

Red  Cott.  5:5.     (7.738. 

Meadow-side.    R.&B.3:162.    C. 

479.     251. 
Meadow-swell.    Para.  1 :  112.     C. 

45. 
Meadow-wreck.     Ari.  A.   5 :  163. 

C.  654. 
Meal-man.     Ari.   A.  5:152.      C. 

649. 
Meal -tub.     Ari.  A.  5:143,      C. 

()46. 
Mealy-mouthed.     Don.  6: 194.     C. 

911. 
Mean.    R.  &  B.  3:202.     C,  495, 

158. 
Fifiue,4:393,     C,707.  287. 


Mean.    At  the  M,  5:  333,     C.  808. 

166. 
Means.    Sor.  1 :  298.     C.  116.    63. 
R.   &  B.  3:230.     C.  506. 

124. 
R.  &  B.  3:456.     C.  593. 

137. 
Two  Poets,  6 :  98.     C.  867. 

51. 
Meaning.    Fra  Lippo,  4:78.     C. 

344.     119. 
Red  Cott.   5:93.     C.   771. 

163. 
Ari.    A.    5:156.      C.    051. 

263. 
Meant.    Colombe,  2 :  197.     C.  237. 

208. 
Fifine,  4:  396.    C.  709.    227. 
Measure.     Para.  1 :  68.     C.  28.    2. 

Para.  1 :  80.     C.  .32.     220. 

Chris.-Eve,   4:30.     C.  326. 

81. 
Measured.     Old  Piet.  2:39.      C. 

176.     244. 
Measuring  -  rod.     Fr.   Fu.   6:333. 

C.  96(). 
Meat.    R.  &  B.   3:450.     C.  591. 

97- 

Doctor,  6 :  187.    C.  908.    41. 


Meat-and-drink-indulgence.    R.  & 

B.  3:404.     C.  572. 
Meddling.     R.  &   B,   3:123.     C. 

4().i.     250. 
Medicinable.    R.  &B.  3:18.     C. 

421.     21. 
Medicine-monger.    Inn  A.  5 :  301, 

C.  796. 
Medium-ghost.      Bean-St.   6 :  279. 

C.  945. 
Medium-pane.    Sludge,  4 :  229.    C. 

400. 
Medium-powers.    R.  &  B.  3:447. 

a  590. 
Medium-ware.    Prince  H.  4 :  331. 

C.  682. 
Meek.   R.&B,3:22.    C.  423.   80. 

Bea.  Sig.  6 :  415  ;  7 :  63.     C. 

997.     157- 
Meet.     R.   &   B.   3:33.      C.   427, 
290. 

Fifine,  4:  415.    C.  719.   337- 

La  S.  6:67.     C.  855.     287. 

Specul.   6:394;    7:13.      C. 

98<».     181. 
Meeting-place.     Colombe,  2:207, 

C.  241. 
Meissonnier.    Red  Cott.  5 :  92.     C. 

771. 
414 


Melody 


Melody.     Fifine,   4:434.     C, 
i6g. 

Chas.   A.   G:355.      C.   975. 

164. 
Melon-flower.    Home-T.  A.  2 :  40. 

C.  179.    25. 
Melon-leaf.     R.&B,3:3.    (7.415. 
Melon -like.     Melon.   6:  242.      C. 

1)30.     180. 
Me^on-parings.     Fra  Lippo,  4 :  76. 


INDEX 

730. 


Mid-age 


C.  343. 
Melon-seller 

930. 
Melon  -  shaped. 

C.  338. 
Memory.     Luria,  2 :  371 
277. 
R.&B.3:292.     (7.530. 


Melon.  0:241.     C. 

Karsh.    4:  04. 

C.  303. 

8. 


Memory-smart.   Worst,  4 :  170.    C 

378.  _ 
Memories.      Para.   1 :  64.      C   20. 

172. 
Lovers'   Q.  2 :  30,     C.  173. 

132. 
A  Blot,  2 :  173.       C.   228. 

150. 

Flight,  2 :  304.     C.  277. 

Luria,  2 :  373.     C.  303.     92. 

Ari.A.5:240.    C.  081.  230. 

Dan.  Bar.  0:310.     C.  958. 

47- 
Membraned.       Prol.    Fif ,   4 :  382, 

C.  701. 
Menace,    R.  &  B.  3 :  391,     C,  507. 

87. 

Ari.A.  5:110.    C.  635.    35. 

Menhir.    Two  Poets,  6 :  80.    C  800. 
Mental.     Fifine,  4:397.      C.   709. 

282. 
Mephitie.     Chris.-Eve,   4:21.     C. 

323.     264. 
Mercenaries,    Colombe,  2 :  206,    C. 

241.     no. 
Merchandizing.      R,   &  B.  3:21, 

C.  422.     168, 
Merchant-kaiser,    R.  &  B,  3: 114, 

C.  459,     275. 
Merchant-ship.    Ari.A. 5: 106.    (7, 

631. 
Mercifiillest.    LiaB.  4:139,     C. 

307, 
Mercifully-politic.     Inn  A.  5 :  290. 

C.  794. 
Mercy.      Her.   Trag.   2:313,      (7, 
280.     124. 

R.&B.3:7,     C,417.    191. 

R.  &  B,  3:300,      C,  555, 

123.     . 


Mercy.  R.&B.3:.372.  (7.500.  62. 

R.&B.3:412.    C.570.    96. 

R.    &   B.   3:452,      C.  592, 

185. 
Mercy-feat.    Red  Cott.  5 :  82.     C. 

707. 
Mercy-stroke.    A  Blot,  2 :  149.    C. 
219. 
R.&B.  3:375.     C.  .501. 


Merely-painted,   Balau.  4 :  270,    (7. 

005. 
Merged.      Dan.   Bar.   0:310,      (7. 

95.S,     282. 
Merit  -  mongers.      Sludge,    4 :  244. 

C,  407, 
Merry  -  go  -  down.      Epil,   Pacch. 

5:391.     C.  828, 
Merry-go-round.     Don.  0 :  193,     C. 

911,     249. 
Mesmerizer.    Lovers'  Q,  2 :  29,    (7. 

173.     229. 
Messenger.     R.   &  B.  3:14.      C. 

420.     7. 
Messuage.      Fr.  Fu.  6: 340.      C. 

909. 
Metal.    Joch.  0 :  227.     C.  925, 
Meteor.     Shah  A.  0 :  245.     C.  931. 

249. 
Meteor-ball,    Too  Late,  4 :  179,    (7, 

381. 
Meteor-blaze.    Ari,  A,  5 :  117,     (7. 

()35. 
Meteor-brilliance,    Ari.  A.  5 :  104. 

C.  030. 
Meteor-mass.      Joch,   0:222.      C. 

922.     218. 
Meteor-moons,    AbtV.4:183.    C. 

382. 
Meteoric,     Balau,  4 :  208,     C.  004. 

65. 
Meticulous,    Chris.-Eve,  4 :  20,    (7. 

325, 
M^tromanie,    Two  Poets,  0:110. 

C.  872. 
Metternich.     Italian,   2:253.      (7. 

258. 
Mewed.    Apol.   &  F.  0:280,     C. 

949.     46. 
Michael.    Fr.Fu.  0:331.     C.  906. 

42. 
Michael  of  Constantinople.  Pietro, 

0:171.     C.  901. 
Miehal.     Para.  1 :  28.     C  12. 
Michelagnolo.      Red  Cott.  5:92. 
C.  771. 

Chris.  Sm.  6 :  314.     C,  959, 

Mid-age.      Red    Cott.  5:18.      C. 

743.     291, 


415 


Mid-air 


INDEX 


Mind 


Mid-air.    R.  &  B.  3 :  393.     C.  5G8. 
Mid- Autumn.      St.   Mart.   5:352. 

C.  S14. 
Mid-Caniival.      R.  &  B.   3:429. 

C.  583. 
Mid-cirque.    R.  &  B.  3:381.     C. 

563.     131. 
Mid-day.    R.  &  B.  3 :  98.     C.  453. 

93- 
Mid-door.     Colombe,   2:186.     C 

233. 
Mid-eclipse.     Gold  H.  4 :  Ift).     C. 

377. 
Mid-hall-gate.    Balau.  4:302.     C. 

61K. 
Mid-line.    Echet.  6:154.     C.  893. 
Mid-March.    R.&B.  3:199.     C. 

494.     265. 
Mid-night.    Sor.   1:287.     C.  111. 

255. 
Mid-November.    La  S.  6 :  75.     C. 

S5S. 
Mid-protestation.     R.  &  B.  3 :  195. 

C.  492. 
Mid-sea.      Sor.     1:198.       C.     76. 

34. 
Mid-seat.    Ari.  A.  5 :  190.     C.  664. 
Mid-shame.    Red  Cott.  5 :  45.     C. 

7.-,3.     58. 
Mid-stream.     R.   &  B.  3:39.     C. 

429. 
Mid-tent's.    Saul.  2 :  47.     C.  179. 
Mid-thigh.    Her.Trag.2:314.    C. 

280. 
Mid-throe.     Fr.  Fu.  6:330.      C. 

965. 
Mid-watch.     Holy-C.  2:319.     C. 

282. 
Midcurrent.    Too  Late,  4 :  178.    C. 

asi.    241. 
MidHnger-deep.   Fifine,4:423.    C. 

724. 
Midmost.     R.   &   B.   3:375.      C. 

.561.     42. 
Midnight.     Luria,  2 :  404.     C.  316. 

166. 
R.   &  B.  3:382.      C.  564. 

254. 
Middle.    R.&B.  3:108.     C.  457. 

201. 
Middle  -  age  -  manners  -  adapter. 

Flight,  2 :  308.     C.  278. 
Middle-aged.    R.&B.  3:42.     C. 

431.     17. 
Might.    R.&B.  3:274.     C.  523. 

193- 
Mild.    Fil.  Bald.  5:384.     C.  826. 

256. 


Mild-moral-monger.  Fr.  Fu.  6 :  330. 

C.  9(;5. 
Mile- wide-mouthed.    M.-m.  Meg, 

(i :  404  ;  7 :  40.     C.  993. 
Milk.     R.   &  B.  3:67.     C.  440. 
130. 

Pietro,6:180.    C.905.    147. 

Milk-mildness.    Joch.  6:230.     C. 

926.     62. 
Milk-nourished.    Red  Cott.  5:  28. 

C.  747. 
Milk-swollen.    R.  &  B.  3:  54.     C. 

435.     32. 
Milk-teeth.    R.  &  B.  3:376.     C. 

561. 
Milk-white.     Para.  1 :  58.     C.  24. 

R.   &  B.  3:324.     C.  542. 

278. 
Mill.     Pacch.5:327.     C.  72.3.    60. 
Mill-door.      R.&B.  3:348.      C. 

551. 
Mill-house-door.    R.  &  B.  3:436. 

C.  585. 
Mill-track.     R.  &  B.  3 :  146.     C. 

472. 
Mill-yoke-wound.     R .  &  B .  3 :  348. 

C.  551. 
Millet-sheaves.      Gondola,   2:265. 

C.  263. 
Million-fold.    Red  Cott.  5 :  49.     C. 

755. 
Million-leaved.    R.   &  B.  3:219. 

C.  501. 
Million-paged.    Fifine,  4:398.     C. 

710. 
Million's-worth.    Red  Cott.  5:23. 

C.  745. 
Millpond-smooth.      Fifine,   4:385. 

C.  703. 
Miltiades.     Phei.  6 :  126.     C.  879. 
Miltiad^s.     Echet.  6 :  154.     C.  893. 
Milton.    Epil.   Pacch.  5:390.     C. 

828.     220. 
Mind.     Para.  1 :  51.     C.  21.    92. 

Straf.  1 :  155.     C.  59.     115. 

Sor.  1 :  297.     C.  115.     34. 

Luria.  2:  385.    C.308.    119. 

R.&B.  3: 147.     C.473.     i. 

R.   &  B.  3:159,     C.  477. 

118. 

R.  &  B.  3:199.      C.  493. 

259. 

R.   &  B.   3:292.      C.  530. 

200. 

R.  &  B.  3:328.     C.  543. 

81. 

R.   &  B.  3:373.     C.  560. 

163. 


416 


Mind 

Mind. 


INDEX 

C.  505. 
C.  508. 
C.  570. 


R.  &  B.  3:385 

203. 
R.   cV-  B.  3:393, 

287. 
R.  ct    B.    3:397. 

93- 
Chiis.-Eve,  4:26.     C.  325. 

249. 

J.  Lee,  4: 160.    C.  375.   289. 

Ber.  de  M.  6 :  301.     C.  954. 

157. 
Mind-broken.     Pau.  1 :  13.     C.  6. 
Mind-Freaks.     Clive,  6:158.     C. 

894. 
Mind-mazed.     Agam.  6 :  34.     C 

843. 
Mind-point.    Cleon,4:116.    C.359. 
Mind"s.     Para.  1:80.    C.  32.    220. 
Minds.     Fifine,  4 :  393.     C.  707. 
Mindful.     R.  &B.3:268.     C.  521. 

93- 
Mine.     Pau.  1 :  15.     C.  7.     176. 
Mines.     Para.      1:121.       C.    48. 

187. 
Mingle.      Crist.     2:19.      C.    170. 

231. 
Minikin  -  mildly.      Paceh.   5:321. 

C.  803. 
Minim.     R.  &  B.  3:  311.     C.  537. 
164. 

R.   &   B.   3:428.     C.  582. 

170. 

Red  Cott.  5:78.     C.   766. 

118. 
Minish.    R.  &  B.  3 :  447.     C.  590. 


Para.    1:49.      C.  21. 


137- 
Ministers 

260. 
Minnikin  -  mou'.       M.-m.     Meg, 

6 :  405  ;  7 :  42.     C.  993. 
Minstrel's-trade.    Sor.  1 :  243.     C. 

94. 
Mint.    Any  Wife,  2:70.     C.  188. 

202. 
Mint  -  perfumed.     Ari.  A.  5:161. 

C.  652. 
Minute.    Stat.   &  B.  2:323.     C. 
284.     150. 

R.  &    B.    3:14.      C.  420. 

214. 

In  a    B.    4:146.      C.   370. 

226. 

Prospice,    4:216.      C.   395. 

287. 
Prince   H.  4:334.     C.  683. 

137- 
Minute -space.     R.   &  B.  3:458. 


C.  594. 


Mislaying 
C.  111. 


Minute's.     Sor.  1:286. 

222 

R.   &"  B.   3:387.     C.  566. 

136. 

Apol.  &  F.  6 :  292.     C.  951. 

245. 
Minutes.    R.  &  B.  3 :  215.     C.  500, 

159. 
Miracle.     R.  &  B.  3 :  212.     C.  498. 
214. 

R.   &   B.   3:342.      C.   549. 

132. 

Ger.  de  L,  6 :  353,     C.  974. 

237. 
Miracle-mongers.     R.  &  B.  3:419. 

a  579. 
Miranda,  Father.   Red  Cott.  5 :  15. 

C.  742. 
Miranda,  L^once.   Red  Cott.  5 :  15. 

C.  742. 
Miranda-dupe.      Red   Cott.   5 :  33. 

C.  749. 
iliranda  -  leaf.     Red  Cott.   5 :  94. 

a  772. 
Miranda -sanctitude.      Red   Cott. 

5 :  18.     C.  743. 
Mire.    R.&B.3:395.    C.  569.  40. 
Mirror-sconces.    R.  &  B.  3 :  2.     C. 

415. 
Mirth.    Childe  R.  2 :  334.     C.  288. 
82. 

R.   &  B.   3:279.      C.  525. 

121. 

R.    &   B.  3:296.     C.  531. 

26. 

R.&B.  3:427.     C.  581. 

Ger.  de  L.  6:  350.     C.  973. 

181. 
Mis  -  state.     J.   Lee,  4 :  156.      C. 


374. 
Miscalculation.     R.  &  B.  3:119. 

C.  458.     107. 
Misconstrued.     Fr.  Fu.  6 :  333.     C. 

967.     275. 
Misereate.     R.  &  B.  3:222.      C. 

503.     236. 
Misdoubt.      Ari.    A.  5:159.      C. 

652.     5,5. 
Misfeatured.    R.  &  B.  3:14.     C. 

420.     7. 
Misfortune.     Inn  A.   5 :  267.      C, 

7.S.S.     223. 
Misgivings.    R.  &  B.  3:335.     C. 

CM.     46. 
Misjudged.     R  &  B.  3:388.     C. 

5()6.     125. 
Mislaying.    Glove,  2: 251.     C.258. 

92. 
417 


Mischief 


INDEX 

C.  452, 

c. 


Mischief.    R.  &B.  3:97. 

97- 
Miserable.     R.   &  B.   3:236 

50.S.     93. 
Misery.    R.  &  B.  3 :  173.     C.  483. 
273. 

R.    &   B.  3:244.      C.  511. 

241. 
Red   Cott.    5:8.     C.    739. 

243- 
Mishna.    Joeh.  6:  211.     C.  918. 
Missal-marge.    One  Word,  4 :  127. 

C.  363 
Missal  -  page.      R.  &  B.  3:370. 

C.  559. 
Missed.     Youth  &  A.  4 :  219.     C. 

39(5.     142. 
Misshapen.     Ari.   A.   5 :  130.      C. 

640.     119. 
Mission.      Fust,   6 :  379.      C.   985. 

196. 
Mist.      The   Confess.     2:16.      C. 

169.     125. 
Patriot,      2:232.      C.    251. 

17- 
Luria,     2:372.       C.      303. 

245. 
Mist -bloom.     Flute -M.    6:423; 

7 :  79.     C.  1000. 
Mist-like.     Para.  1 :  59.     C.  25. 
MLsts.       Joeh.    6:225.      C.     924. 

88 
Mistake.      Sor.    1:240.       C.    93. 

170. 
R.  &    B.   3:91.      C.  450. 

158. 
R.  &  B.  3:341.      C.  548. 

5- 
R.   &  B.  3:372.     C.  560. 

41. 
Eas.-Day,   4:37.      C.    329. 

283. 
Death  in  D.  4 :  200.     C.  389. 

181. 
Death  in  D.  4 :  204.     C.  391. 

263. 
EpU.  Melon-S.  6:242.      C. 

930.     284. 
Mistook.      R.   &  B.  3:159.      C. 

^11.     118. 
Mistress.     Song,  2:21.      C.  170. 

95. 
Mistress  -  messenger.      R.    &    B. 

3 :  209.     C.  497. 
Mistress  -  queen.      Inn  A.   5 :  279. 

C.  787. 
Mistress -ship.     Red  Cott.  5:31. 

C.  748. 


Mock-praise 
Red  Cott.  5:27.      C. 
C. 


Mistrust. 

74(j. 
Mitigates.    R.  &  B.  3:271. 

522. 
Mix.      By  Fire.    2:63.      C.    186. 

234. 
Mixed.    Sor.  1:210.     C.  81.     51. 
Mixture.     Gold  H.  4 :  169.    C.  378. 

66. 
Mixture  -  monument.       Ari.     A. 

5 :  138.     C.  643. 
Mizraim.    Joeh.  6^228.     C.  925. 
Mizzen-rigging.    Nat.  in  D.  2 :  8. 

c.  im. 

Moan.     J.   Lee,   4 :  160.      C.   375. 

63. 
Mob.     R.   &  B.  3:72.     C.  442. 

85. 
Mob-dictature.      Ari.   A.   5:138. 

C.  613. 
Mob -elbowed.     Red  Cott.  5:8. 

C.  739. 
Mob -outcry.      Agam.   6:28.      C. 

841. 
Mob-favorites.    Ari.  A.  5 :  167.    C. 

655. 
Mob-flattery.    Ari.  A.  5:167.     C. 

655. 
Mob -rule.     Ari.  A.  5:167.      C. 

655. 
Mob  -  unroar.     Agam.  6 :  26.      C. 

840. 
Mock.    R.   &  B.  3:13.     C.  419. 

195. 
Mock-demureness.  R.  &  B.  3 :  429. 

C.  582.     69. 
Mock -faith.    Red  Cott.  5  :  32.    C. 

748. 
Mock-foe.     Ari.  A.   5:151.     C 

649. 
Mock-heroics.     Inn  A.  5 :  260.     C. 

780. 
Mock-invitation.    R.  &  B.  3 :  201. 

C.  494. 
Mock  -  melancholy.     Ber.  de  M. 

6  :  2CK).     C.  952. 
Mock-mUdness.     R.   &  B.  3:22. 

C.  423.     50. 
Mock-mistress.    R.   &    B.  3:146. 

C.  472.     32. 
Mock-modest.     Geo.  B.  D.  6  :  324. 

C.  9(33.     228. 
Mock-modesty.    Inn  A.  5:257.    C. 

779. 
Mock-mother.    R.&B.3:34.    C. 

427. 
Mock-praise.    Ari.  A.  5 :  128.    C. 

640. 


418 


Mock-sun 


INDEX 


Moral 


Mock-sun.    Pisgah  11,  5 :  343.     C. 
811. 

Two  Poets,  6 :  86.     C.  862. 

Mock  -  turquoise.      Fifine,  4:  388. 

C.  7()4. 
Mockerj'-    Pau.l:21.  C.IO.    235. 

Luria,  2 :  382.     C.  307.     63. 

Mode  -  merchandise.       Red   Cott. 

5:39.     C.  751. 
Model.    R.&B.  3:321.     C.  541. 

II. 
Model-mouth.     R.   &  B.  3:466. 

C.  597. 
Modesty.      R.   &  B.   3:338.      C. 

547.     158. 
Moist-handed.    Mul^y.6:164.    C. 

897. 
Molars.    R.  &  B.  3  :  426.     C.  581. 

23. 
MoHn^s.     R.    &   B.    3:135.      C. 

468. 
Mollitious.    R.   &   B.  3:346.     C. 

550.     151. 
Moly.     Pietro,  6 :  169.     C.  900. 
Moment.     Straf.   1:133.      C.   51. 

254. 

Souls  Tr.  2:352.     C.  295. 

198. 
Moment-space.    J.  Lee,  4:163.    C. 

376.     60. 
Money-bag.    R.   &  B.  3 :  74.     C. 

443.     150. 
Money-bags.     R.  &  B.  3  :  155.     C. 

476.     232. 
Money-chink.      Shop,   5:340.     C. 

810. 
Money-coffer.    R.&B.  3: 164.    0. 

480.    277. 
Money-color.    Red  Cott.  5 :  22.    C. 

744. 
Money-muck.      Red  Cott.  5 :  94. 

C.  772. 
Money-payment.    R.  &  B.  3 :  293. 

C.  530. 
Money-piece.    R.&B.  3: 369.     C. 

559.  180. 

Money-worth.     Inn  A.  5  :  277.    C. 

787.     269. 
Money's-worth.     R.  &  B.  3:377. 

C.  562. 
Mongrel-brat.      R.    &  B.    3:145. 

C.  472. 
Monitory.     R.  &  B.  3:374.     C. 

560.  251. 

Monk.     R.  &  B.  3:194.     C.  491. 

26. 
Monk's-things.    Fra  Lippo,  4  :  82. 

C.  345, 


Monkey-mien.     R.  &  B.  3 :  13.    C. 

419.     166. 
Monopoly.     R.    &  B.   3:369.     C. 

55S.     135. 
Monsignor.      Pippa,    1  :  331,       C 

l.'M). 
Monster.    R.  &  B.  3 :  19.     C.  422. 

41. 
Monster-birth.      Red  Cott.   5  :  69. 

C.  762. 
Monster-laugh.      R.  &  B.  3:416. 

C.  578. 
Monstrous.     Para.  1 :  42.     C   18. 

142. 
Month.    R.   &  B.  3:6.     C.  416. 
287. 

La  8.  6 :  56.     C.  850.     290. 

Mood.     Pau.  1:7.     C.  4.     269. 

Cbilde  R.  2 :  334.     C.  288. 

82. 

Fifine,  4:427.    C.  726.    181. 

La  S.  6  :  59.     C.  851.     264. 

Moods.     Prince  H.  4 :  333.    C.  683. 

244. 
Moon.     Para.  1 :  108.     C.  43.     9. 

Druses,  2 :  97.     C.  197.     46. 

One  Word,  4 :  128.     C.  3(i3. 

Ivkn,  6: 133.     C.  882.    229. 

Pan,  6: 190.     C.  910.     180. 

Dan.  Bar.  6:310,     C.  958. 

35. 

Poetics,  6 :  393  ;  7 :  10,      C. 

988.     147. 
Moon-births.     May   &   D.   4:215. 

C.  395.     87. 
Moon  -  eclipse.      Pan,   6 :  190.      C. 

910. 
Moon-like.     R.  &  B.   3:340.     C. 

548.     271. 
Moon-maid.    Ger.  de  L.  6 :  348.    C. 

972. 
Moon-rainbow.     Chris.-Eve,   4 :  9. 

C.  319. 
Moon-spots.     Ari.   A.   5:146.     C 

647. 
Moon-suffused.    Dan.  Bar.  6:  310. 

C.  958.     35.. 
Moonbeam-smile.    Numph.  5 :  347. 

C.  812. 
Moonfern.    Sor.  1 :  238.     C.  92. 
Moonshine -structure.      R.   &   B. 

3:332.     C.  545.     198. 
Mopping.     R.  &  B.  3:  13.     C.  419. 

166. 
Moral.      Glove,   2:251.      C.  258. 
252. 

Soul's  Tr.  2:354.     C.  296. 

126, 


419 


Moral 


INDEX 

C.  7G9. 


Moral.     RedCott.   5:86 

175- 

Fr.Fu.  6:335.  C.967.    209. 

Morals.     Red  Cott.  5:  51.     C.  755. 

61. 
Morality.     Fifine,  4 :  388.     0.705. 

150. 
Morbifies.     Ari.A.5:123.    C.  638. 

65. 
More,  Hannah.    Bad  D.  11. 6 :  397  ; 

7 :  20.     C.  990. 
More-enduring.     Chris.-Eve,  4 :  16. 

C.  321. 
Morello's.     Andrea,  4:  85.    C.  346. 
Morgue.     App.   Fail.   4:257.     C. 

412. 
Morn.     Para.  1 :  118.     C.  47.    64. 

Pippa,  1:337.    C.133.    289. 

Morn-blush.     Pau.  1 :  14.     C.  7. 
Morn-ray.    Ari.A.5:2.30.    C.  677. 
Morn -star's.      Dan.   Bar.   6:311. 

a  958. 
Morn's.    Red  Cott.  5 :  97.     C.  773. 

202. 
Morning.     Pippa,  1 :  356.     C.  140. 
106. 

Lost  L.  2 :  4.     C.  164.    265. 

R.    &   B,  3:272.      C.  523. 

203. 
Morning-gray.    An.  A.  5 :  232.    C. 

677. 
Morning-light.  The  Confess.  2 :  17. 

C.  169.    231. 
Morning-meal.      Cherries,   6:  263. 

C.  938. 
Morning-prime.    Fifine,  4 :  405.    C. 

714. 
Morning-red.    R.&B.3:223.     C. 

503.     26. 
Morning-star.    R.  &B.3:469.    C. 

598.     73. 
Morning-troop.     Count  G.  2 :  235. 

C.  252. 
Morrow  -  after  -  that.       Colombe, 

2:197.     C.  237._ 
Morrow-day.    Ari.  A.  5:164.     C. 

654. 
Morse.    Sor.  1 :  241.     C.  93.     173. 
Morsel.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  350.    0.295. 

185. 
Mortal-bom.     Imp.   Aug.   6:427; 

7 :  87.     C.  1002.     286. 
Mortal-like.  Balau.4:307.   0.619. 
Mortals.     Evelyn,   2:24.     O.  171. 
171. 

R.    &    B.  3:71.      O.  442. 

240. 
Mortcloth.  St.  Prax.  4:91.  0.349. 


Mother-wit 
R.&B.  3:165.     O. 


Mosaic- wise 

480.     85. 
Moselle.     Pied  Piper,  2:285.     O. 

269. 
Moses.     Death  in   D.   4:205.     O. 

391. 
Moss-fringe.     Fr.    Fu.  6:330.     O. 

965. 
Moss-patch,    Bean-St.  6:275.     O. 

943. 
Moss-tuft.     Chas.  A.  6:354.     O. 

974. 
Mote-self.     R.  &  B.  3:424.     O. 

580. 
Mote's-breadth.   Chris.-Eve,  4 :  28. 

0.  325.     199. 
Mother.    A  Blot,  2 :  157.     0.  222. 
290. 

R.   &  B.  3:141. 

153. 

R.  &  B.   3:276. 

148. 
R.   &  B.  3:427. 


R.  &  B.  3:428 

43- 

Mother-bee. 
Mother-bird 


O.  470. 
O.  524. 
O.  582. 
O.  582. 
0.91. 


Sor.  1 :  235. 
Eagle,   6:240.      O. 
929. 
Mother  -  breast.       Rev.     6 :  437  ; 

7 :  107.     0.  1006. 
Mother-cat's.     Flight,  2:294.     O. 

273. 
Mother-eagle's.     Incident,  2:232. 

0.251.    80. 
Mother-in-law.     R.  &   B.  3:123. 

O.  463.     250. 
Mother-knees.     R.   &   B.   3:346. 

O.  550.     200. 
Mother-lap.    Red  Cott.  5:  78.     O. 

7()6. 
Mother-maid.     R.  &  B.  3:321. 
O.  541. 
Chris.  Sm.  6:313.     0.959. 


Mother-moon's.    Chris.-Eve,  4 :  9. 

O.  319. 
Mother-mount.     Druses,  2 :  97.    O. 

197. 
Mother-mouse.     Red  Cott.  5 :  10. 

O.  740. 
Mother-ribs.    Prince  H.  4 :  369.  O. 

6iH3. 
Mother-slaying.    Agam.  6:39.    O. 

844. 
Mother-town.    Ari.  A.  5 :  184.     O. 

662. 
Mother-wit.    R.&B.  3:345.     O. 

550.     131. 


420 


Mother's-vrord 


INDEX 


Mozart 


Mother's-word,    Luria,  2 :  385.    C. 

308. 
Mothers.    R.  &B.3:275.     0.524. 

Motlierkin.      Ivkn,    6:132.       C. 

881. 
Motion.      Prince  H.    4:376.      C. 

699.     170. 
Motions.    R.  &  B.  3: 16.     C.  421. 

200. 
Motive.    R.  &  B.  3 :  368.     C.  558. 
Motives.      Para.    1:107.      C.  43. 
274. 

In    a    B.   4:136,      C.   366. 

61. 
Mould.    R.  &  B.  3:155.     C.  476. 

161. 
Mould-flower.     Pretty  W.  2:79. 

C.  191. 
Moulder.    Stat.  &  B.  2: 327.     C. 

285.     23. 
Mount.     Rudel,  4: 123.     C.  361. 
Mount.     Fifine,   4:410.      C.   717. 

63. 

Camel-D.    6:'259.     C.  937. 

84. 
Mount-mounting.    Ned  B.  6 :  144. 

C.  888. 
Mountain-apple.     Dis  Al.   4 :  175. 

C.  380.     15. 
Mountain-baths.     Para.  1 :  64.    C. 

26. 
Mountain-climbing.     La  S.  6 :  55. 

C.  850. 
Mountain-cloistered.    Para.  1 :  81. 

C.  33. 
Mountain-close.     Sor.   1 :  246.      C. 

97. 
Mountain -cup.     Sor.  1:237.     C 

92. 
Mountain  -  edge.      Up  —  Down, 

2:32.     C.  174. 
Mountaiu-flowers.     By  Fire.  2 :  60. 

C.  185. 
Mountain  -granite.      Ber.   de   M. 

6:300.     (7.954. 
Mountain-hive.     Sor.   1 :  235.      C 

91. 
Mountain-like.     Pan.  1 :  19.     C.  9. 
283. 

R.    &   B.  3:97.      C.  452. 

206. 
Mountain-peak.    Prince  H.  4 :  368. 

C.  696. 
Mountain-piling.     Para.  1 :  104.  C. 

41. 
Mountain-ridge.    Ger.  de  L.  6 :  351. 

C.  973.    245, 


Mountain-roving.    Ari.  A.  5 :  189. 

C.  6(!4. 
Mountain-shell.     Balau.4:287.  C. 

611. 
Mountain-side.     R.  &  B.   3:173. 

C.  483.     273. 
Mountain -top.     R.  &  B.  3:373. 

C.  560. 
Mountain-wave.     R.   &   B.  3:65. 

C.  440.     269. 
Mountain  -  wood  -  flame.      Agam. 

6:1().     C.  83(). 
Mountain's.      Parting,   2:21.      C. 

170.     245. 
Mountains.    R.   &   B.  3:79.      C. 
445.     260. 

Pan,  6 :  188.     C.  909.     187. 

Mountebank  -  claptrap.      Ari.    A. 

5:175.     C.  658. 
Mouse.      Saul,    2:48.       C.     180. 
121. 

Mary  W.   6:206.      C.  916. 

171. 
Mouse-birth.    R.  &  B.  3:97.     C. 

452.     207. 
Mouse  -  ear.      Bea.    Sig.    6 :  419  ; 

7  :  70.     C.  999. 
Mouse  -  fashion.       M.  -  m.    Meg, 

6:405;  7:41.     C.  993.     139. 
Mouth.     Pan.  1:6.     C.  4.     227. 

Evelj^i,  2 :  24.     C.  171. 

Stat.  &  B.  2 :  324.     C.  284. 

252. 

R.   &  B.  3:217.      C.  501. 

163. 

Pict.  Ig.  4 :  73.     C.  341.   37- 

Andrea,  4:  85.  C.  347.    184. 

Fifine,  4  :  402.    C.  713.    218. 

Mouth-of-Truth.     R.  &  B.  3 :  408. 

C.  574. 
Mouth-wise. 

805.     280. 
Mouths.    R.  &  B.  3 :  258.     C.  517. 
163. 

Epil.  Paceh.  5 :  394.    C.  829. 

158. 
Move.    Red  Cott.  5:27.     C.  746. 

85. 
Pietro,     6:177.       C.     904. 

87. 
Fust,  6:373.     C.  982.    57. 


Pacch.  5:327. 


Moves.  R.    &    B.   3:19.     C.  422. 

22 

Moved.    R.  &  B.  3:22.     C.  423. 

181. 
Mowing.    R.  &  B.  3: 13.     C.  419. 

166. 
Mozart.    La  S.  6:  67.    C.  855.    16. 


421 


Much-abused 


INDEX 


Music 


Much-abused.     Soul's  Tr.  2 :  351. 

C.  2i)5. 
Much-befriended.    R.  &  B.  3 :  367. 

C.  558. 
Much-bewailed.    Agam.  G :  47.    C. 

847. 
Much-bewildered,    Balau.  4 :  303. 

C.  618. 
Much  -  commiserated.      R.  &  B. 

3:171.     0.482. 
Much-enduring.    R.  &  B.  3 :  334. 

C.  545.     2o6. 
Mueh-enhghtened.      Joch.   6 :  211. 

C.  !I18.       122. 

Much-experienced.     Imi  A.  5 :  309. 

C.  800. 
Much-liked.     Inn   A.   5:270.     C. 

784. 
Much-loved.    An.  A.  5:213.     C. 

671. 
Much-meaning.  Two  Poets,  6 :  103. 

C.  869.     69. 
Much-memorable.      Agam.   6 :  45. 

C.  846. 
Much-mindful.    Agam.  6 :  44.     C. 

84(5. 
Mueh-misvalued.     Inn  A.   5 :  283. 

C.  789. 
Much-professing.    King  C.  1 :  399. 

C.  157. 
Muck.    Sludge,  4:239.     C.  405. 
Muck-sweat.    Ned  B,  6:144.     C. 

888. 
Muckworm.    Straf.  1:131.    C.  50. 
Muekle-mouth  Meg.    M.-m.  Meg. 

6 :  404  ;  7 :  40.     C.  993. 
Mud.    R.&B.3:13.     C.419.    17. 

R.  «fe  B.  3 :  189.     C.  489. 

Mud-ball.    Forgiv.  5 :  367.    C.820. 
Mud-bath.    Red  Cott,  6:86.     C. 

769. 
Mud-built.    R.  &  B.  3:391.     C. 

567.     87. 
Mud-mixture.      Red   Cott.   5:25. 

C.  746. 
Mud-monuments.    Ari.  A.  5 :  236. 

C.  679. 
Mud-paste.   R.&B.3:53.    0.435. 

191. 
Mud-pellet.     Ari.  A.  5:160.     C. 

652. 
Mud-stained.    Ari.  A.  5:171.     C. 

656. 
Mud-worms.    R.  &  B.  3 :  388.     C. 

566. 
Mudlark's.    Geo.  B,  D.  6:  319,    C. 

961.     184. 
Mued.    R.  &  B.  3:  347,     C.  551. 


422 


Muffled.     St.   Mart.  5:353.      C. 
815.     125. 

Chris.  Sm.  6:  316.     C.  960, 

206. 
Mufflers.    Paceh.  5 :  327.     C.  723. 

60.     161. 
Mule  -  and  -  baggage.       Shah    A. 

6:245.     C.  931. 
Multitude.    Gram.  Fun.  2:  313.    C. 

280.     256. 
Multitudinously.      Ari.   A.   5 :  99. 

C.  628.     274. 
Mumping.     R.   &   B.   3 :  445.     C. 

589.     159. 
Munuchion-month.   Ari.  A.  5 :  239. 

C.  680. 
Murder.    R.  &  B.  3 :  368.     C.  558. 
165. 

R.  &  B.  3:457.      C.  594. 

190. 
Murder-craze.     Ari.  A.  5 :  208.    C. 

670. 
Murder-crusted.    R.  &  B.  3 :  454. 

C.  592. 
Murder-free.     Inn  A.  5:266.     C. 

782. 
Murder-place.    Mar.  Rel.  6 :  124. 

C.  ^11. 
Murdered.      R.  &   B.  3 :  34.      C. 

427.     205. 
Murrey-colored.     Sor.   1 :  231.     C. 

90. 
Muscly.    Hal.  &  Hob,  6 :  129.     C. 

880.      220. 

Muse.    R.  &  B.  3  :  300.     C.  533. 
130. 

Ari.     A.   [5:228.     C.  976. 

154. 

■ Two  Poets,  6 :  84.  C.  862.  6. 

Muse-mad.     Ari.   A.   5:148.      C. 

648. 
Mushroom  -  growth.       R.    &    B. 

3 :  310.     C.  537. 
Mushtari.      Cherries,  6:263.      C. 

939.     155. 
Music.     Pau.  1 :  14.     C.  7. 

Para.  1 :  113,     C.  45.     20. 

Straf.  1 :  183.     C.  70.     72. 

R.  &B.  3:28.    C.425.    216. 

Eas.-Day,   4:52.      C.  334, 

269. 

AbtV.  4:182.     C.  382. 

^.Fifine,4:423.    C.  724.    253. 

Ari.  A.  5 :  150.  C.  648.    270. 

La  S.  6 :  62.     C.  853.    23. 

Joch.  6 :  226.     C.  924.    172, 

Chas.  A.  6:357.     C.  976. 

272. 


Music-fraught 


INDEX 


Nature 


Music-fraught.     Prince  H.  4 :  350. 

C.  089. 
Music-maker.    Dis  Al.  4 :  174.    C. 
379.     215. 

Chas.  A.  <) :  ;355.     C.  975. 

Music  -  manufacture.       Chas.   A. 

6 :  356.     C.  975. 
Music  -  notes.     Fra  Lippo,  4 :  77. 

C.  343. 
Music-phrase.     Inn  A.  5 :  285.     C. 

790. 
Music-witch.     Ari.  A.  5:110.     C. 

632. 
Musk.    R.  &  B.  3 :  231.     C.  50G. 

19. 
Musk-pod.    Sor.  1 :  ,326.     C.  127. 
Mussel-shell.    RedCott.  5:2.     C. 

737.    286. 
Must.     Ari.  A.  5 :  123.     C.  637. 
Mutation.     Luria,  2 :  377.     C.  305. 

136. 
Mute  -  marching.      Balau.   4 :  302. 

C.  617. 
Mute  -  mazed.     Chris.-Eve,   4 :  28. 

C.  32(). 
Mutually-murderous.  Agam.  6 :  48. 

C.  847. 
Myrtle-bed.    Ari.  A.  5:112.      C. 

633. 
Myrtle  -  berries.      Ari.   A.   5:152. 

C.  649. 
MjTtle-bough.    Ari.  A.  5 :  124.    C. 

608. 
Mystery.      Pau.    1:23.       C.     10. 
169. 

R.   &  B.  3:190.      C.  490. 

120. 
R.   &  B.  3:200.     C.  494. 

157-     ,       ^. 
Mystic  -  lettered.     Pietro,   6 :  169. 


C.  900. 


N 


Naddo.    Sor.  1:209.     C.  81. 
Nail-scratch.    Balau.  4:303.     C. 

618. 
Nakedness.    R.  &  B.  3 :  210.     C. 

498.     221. 
Name.      Earth's    Im.   2:20.      C. 

170.     133. 
Last    R.    2:279.       C.   267. 

19. 
Last    R.    2:280.      C.   268. 

I. 
R.   &  B.   3:365.     C.  557. 

99. 


Name.     Ari.  A.    5 :  144.     C.  646. 

249. 
Name-pecking.      R.   &   B.   3  :  75. 

(7_  444 

Names.  '  Waring,  2 :  274.     C.  266. 

54. 
Soul's  Tr.  2:352.     C.  295. 

219. 
Bishop  B.  4 :  114.     C.  358. 

259. 
Named.      Popul.  2:90.      C.   195. 

238. 
Ben  Ezra,  4 :  188.     C.  384. 

64. 
Chris.  Sm.  6 :  315.     C.  960. 

154- 
Naples-born.    R.&B.3:459.     C. 

594. 
Napoleon.     Bishop  B.  4: 102.     C. 

353. 
Licident,  2:231.     C.  251. 


Nard.     Para.  1 :  90.     C.  36. 
Narrow.     Pau.  1 :  16.     C.  8.     236. 

La  S.  6 :  67.     C.  855.     166. 

Ber.  de  M.  6 :  298.     C.  953, 

154. 
Naso.     Glove,  2 :  247.     C.  256. 
Nation's.     Straf .    1 :  133.      C.  51. 

203. 
Nations.     Fr.  Fu.  6:34L     C.  970. 

127. 
Natural.     Sor.    1:312.      C.    122. 

66. 
R.   &   B.   3 :  201.     C.  494. 

271. 
Two  Poets,  6 :  104.     C.  870. 

288. 
Nature.       Sor.     1:249.       C.    9(5. 

282. 

Glove,  2:  250.    C.257.    189, 

Childe  R.  2:332.     C.  287. 

239. 
Soul's  Tr.  2 :  343.     C.  291. 

260. 
R.  &  B.   3  :  155.     C.  476. 

185. 
R.   «&;  B.  3:257.     C.  517. 

91. 
R.   &  B.   3:339.     C.  547. 

67. 
R.   &  B.  3:380.      C.  563. 

93. 
Eas.-Day,  4:50.      C.    333. 


Pacch.5>318.     C.  802.    10. 
La  S.  6:54.     C.  849.     117. 
Apol.  «S;  F.  6:291.     C.  950. 
10. 


423 


Nature 


IKDEX 


New 


Nature.    Fr.  Fu.  6:330.     C.  965. 

4- 
Nature-student.     Fr.  Fu.  6:330. 

C.  965. 
Nature's.    Toccata,  2 :  36.    C.  175. 
217. 

Fifine,  4:438.     C.  733.    10. 

Ari.    A.    5:133.      C.    641. 

8. 

Don.  6:  1%.     C.  912.     160. 

Natures.      Para.    1 :  65.       C.    27. 
247. 

K.   &  B.  3:383.      C.  564. 

163. 
Naught.    Sor.  1:255.     C.99.  135. 

K.   &  B.  3:257.     C.  516. 

112. 
Naught-enduring.     Luria,  2 :  385. 

C.  308.    82. 
Naughty-and-repentant.      Inn    A. 

5 :  mi.     C.  797. 
Nauteh.    Fifine,  4 :  394.     C.  708. 
Neapolitan.     R.  &  B.  3:  328.     C. 

543.     191. 
Near.    Women   &  R.   2:85.      C. 

193.     76. 
Necessity.    Fifine,  4 :  402.     C.  712. 

79. 
Neck.     Para.  1 :  73.     C.  30.     209. 

R.    &   B.  3:426.      C.   581. 

125. 
Neck-deep.    R.  &  B.  3:146.     C. 

472. 
Nectar-brimmed.     Women  &  R. 

2 :  85.     C.  193. 
Ned  Bratts.    Ned  B.  6:144.    C. 

8S8 
Need!      Parting,   2:21.      C.    170. 

155- 
Ben  Ezra,  4 :  190.     C.  385. 

93. 

La  S.  6 :  57.     C.  851.     165. 

Needs.    R.  &  B.3:227.     C.  505. 

212. 
Needle-sharp.    Two  Poets,  6 :  103. 

C.  869.     69. 
Needle-worked.     R.  &  B.  3 :  450. 

C.  591, 
NegUgence.    R.  &  B.  3:433.     C. 

584.     152. 
Negligent.    Two  Poets,  6 :  90.     C. 

8(>4.     249. 
Neighbor.    R.«S;B,3:67.     C.440. 

130. 
Neighbor  -  like.      Ari.   A.   5  :  167. 

C.  655. 
Neighbor's.     Chris.-Eve,  4 :  26.  C. 

325.     38. 


Neighbor's.  Ari.A.5:121,   C.637. 

125. 
Neighbors.    R.  &  B.  3:108.     C. 

457.     127. 
Neighborhood,     R.   &   B.   3:155. 

C.  476.     196. 
Nemi.     Prince     H,    4:379,      C. 

700. 
Nepenthe.    R.  &  B.  3:334.     C. 

545. 
Nephews.     R.   &  B.  3:101.      C. 

454.     77. 
Nero.    R.  &  B.  3  :  229.     C.  505, 
Nerve.    R.  «fe  B.  3 :  3.34.     C.  545. 
206. 

R.   &  B.  3:384.      C.  564. 

213. 

R.   &   B.   3:445.     C.  589. 

279. 
Eas.-Day,  4:47.      C.   332. 


Hal.   &    Hob,   6:129.      C. 

880.     220. 
Nerves.     Life  in  L.  2 :  81.     C.  192, 
129. 

Before,      2:86.       C.      193. 

136. 
Nerved.      Ben  Ezra,   4:188.      C. 

384.     154. 
Nest.    R.  &  B.  3:219.     C.  502. 

257. 
Nest-egg.    Straf .  1 :  145.     C.  56. 
Nest-like.      Cherries,   6:264.      C. 

939. 
Net.     Pope   &  N.   6:402;    7:34. 

C.  992.    80. 
Net  -  frame.     Agam.    6 :  42.      C. 

845. 
Net-poles.     Englishm.  2:257,     C. 

260. 
Net  -  worked.     Englishm.   2  :  257. 

C.  260. 
Nether-brooding.    Chas.  A.  6 :  359. 

C.  976. 
Nettle-broth.    Epil.  Pacch.  5 :  394. 

C.  829.     191. 
Never.     Epil.   A.   6:440;    7:113. 

C.  1007.     265. 
Never-dying.      Dan.   Bar.   6 :  310. 

C.  9.58.     182. 
Never-ending.    Joch.   6:232.      C. 

927. 
Never- night -capped.    Red  Cott. 

5:6.     C.  738. 
Never  -  tiring.      Para.    1 :  89.      C. 

36. 
New.     Old  Pict.  2:41.     C.  177. 

80. 


424 


Ne"wr 


INDEX 

C.  187. 

C,  296. 

315. 


Night's 


New.    Any  Wife,  2:67. 
231. 

Soul's  Tr.  2:354 

126. 

Liiria,     2  :  404.        C. 

164. 

E.  ite  B.  3:326.      C.  543. 

175. 

Ari.    A.    5:121.      C.    637. 

i8g. 
New-blown.     Pippa,    1:329.      C. 

129. 
New-breathed.     Para.  1 :  36.     C 

16. 
New-broke.    Sor.  1 :  243.     C.  94. 
New-broken.     K.  &B.  3:80.     C. 

44(). 
New  -  built.      Imp.   Aug.   6 :  426  ; 

7:«4.     C.  1001.     210. 
New-captured.    Agam.  6:31.     C 

842. 
New-coiued.   Bishop  B.  4: 102.    C. 

353. 
New-come.     Ari.   A.  5:  163.      C. 

653.     99. 
New-created.      La  S.   6:  68.      C. 

856. 
New-cropped.    Sor.  1:320.    C.  125. 
New  -  established.      Karsh.   4 :  66. 

C.  339. 
New-fangled.     Ari.  A.  5 :  155.     C. 

650.     41. 
New-found.     Ari.   A.   5 :  155.     C 

650.     41. 
New-hatched.    Flight,  2 :  298.     C. 

274. 
New-hearted.     Para.  1 :  36.    C.  16. 
New-manned.    R.  &  B.  3: 11.     C. 

418. 
New-married.    Agam.  6:  35.     C 

843. 
New-marrowed.    Sor.   1 :  295.    C. 

115. 
New-puffed.     Don.  6: 194.    C.911. 
New-shapes.     Pau.  1 :  17.     C.  8. 

141. 
New-struck.      Balau.   4:324.      C. 

626. 
New-suited.    Chas.  A.  6 :  354.     C. 

975. 
New-yeaned.    Hal.  &  Hob,  6 :  130. 

C.  880. 
News.    How,  2:6.     C.  165.    90. 

Shah    A.   6:245.      C.  931. 

249. 
Newly-made.      Chris.  -  Eve,   4 :  7. 

C.  318.     93. 
Newman.    K.&B.3:11.     C.418. 


Newspaper-notice.    Inn  A.  5:278. 

C.  787. 
Newspaper  -  paragraph.     Inn    A. 

5 :  247.     C.  775. 
Next-day.    Inn  A.  5:  260.     C.780. 

39. 
Nibble.       Straf .   1 :  1:57.       C.   53. 

228. 
Nicely-balanced.     Sludge,  4 :  235. 

C.  403. 
Nigh.    Eas.-Day,  4 :  32.     C.  327. 

48. 
Night.     Straf.  1 :  156.    C.  60.    238. 

Pippa,  1:333.    C.  131.    166, 

Luria,2:372.    C.303.    207. 

Luria,2:399.    C.  314.    176. 

R.&B.3:15.     0.420.    51. 

R.   &  B.  3:91.      C.  450. 

172. 

Prince   H.  4 :  331.     C.  682. 

51- 

Fr.   Fu.  6  :  339.       C.   969. 

187. 
Night-air.     Chris.-Eve,  4:1.      C. 

316.     30. 
Night-birds.     CUve,   6:156.      C. 

894. 
Night-cap-show.     Red  Cott.  5  :  7. 

C.  739. 
Night-crowned.    Apol.  &  F.  6 :  286. 

C.  949. 
Night-discourse.    Ari.   A.  5 :  104. 

C.  ()30.  _ 
Night-faring.     Agam.   6 :  13.      C 

835. 
Night-feast.     Forgiv.  5:362.     C. 

818. 
Night-hawk.      Prince   H.   4  :  363, 

0.694.     116. 
Night-involved.    Agam.  6  :  15.    C. 

836. 
Night-long.    R.&B.  3:427.     C. 

582. 
Night  -  messenger.     Agam.  6  :  19. 

C.  837. 
Night-rest.    Agam.  6:4.     C.  831. 
Night-roaming.      Ari.   A.   5 :  153. 

C.  649. 
Night-watch.      Joch.   6:212.      C. 

918. 
Night-wind.    Para.  1 :  96.     C.  38. 

213. 
Night's.    R.  &  B.  3 :  396.     C.  569. 
268. 

Bean-St.   6  :  273.      C.  942. 

91. 

Ber.  de  M.  6 :  300.     C.  954. 

245. 


425 


Night's-vrork 


INDEX 


Not-silly 


Niffht's-work.     Joch.  0:223.     C. 

923. 
Nights.     Pippa,  1:354,     C.  139. 
158. 

Inn  A.  5  :  2(il.     C.  780.     54. 

Nightmare.     La  S.  G  :  05.     C.  854. 

49- 
Nikias.    Balau.  4 :  263.     C.  602. 
Nine-and-ninety.    Light  W.  2 :  277. 

C.  207. 
Nine-hnndred-years-old.    My  Last 

D.  2  :  234.     C.  252. 
Ninety-six.    R.  &  B.  3:286.     C. 

528. 
Ninny-Uke.     Ari.   A.   5 :  132.     C. 

041. 
Nipper-nose.    Ari.  A.  5 :  123.     C, 

038. 
Nishapur.       Melon.   6 :  242.       C. 

930.     265. 
Nitrons.     Karsh.  4:70.     C.  340. 
No-deserts.     A   Blot,   2 :  144.     C. 

210. 
No-end  -  of  -  n  ames  -  behind .     Two 

Poets,  0:110.     C.  872. 
No-man-minder.    Agani.  0 :  50.    C. 

848. 
No-man's-land.     R.  &   B.  3:112. 

C.  458. 
No-parents.    R.  &  B.  3: 172.     C. 

483. 
No-time.     Sor.  1  :  230.     C.  89. 
Nobody.    Imp.  Aug.  6  :  426  ;  7:85. 

C.  1002. 
Noah's -dove.      R.   &  B.  3:474. 

C.  (iOO. 
Nobility.    R.  &  B.  3: 43.     C.  431. 

76. 
R.   &  B.   3:142.     C.  'ill. 

194- 
Noble.    Fust,  0:378.    C.  984.    127. 
Nobleness.     R.   &  B.  3:68.     C. 

441.     197. 

R.  &  B.  3:  456.    C.  .593.  48. 

Nobly-born.    Ari.  A.  5:181.     C. 

cm. 

Noddy.    Pied  Piper,  2:282.      C. 

208. 
Noisome-deep.    Inn  A.  5  :  245.    C. 

774. 
Non-essentials.    R.   &   B.   3:171. 

C.  482.     71. 
Non-production.     R.  &  B.  3  :  350. 

^  C.  552. 
Non-sequence.     Pacch.  5 :  327.    C. 

80(j. 
Non  -  surviving.     Bean-St.  6 :  277. 

C.  944. 


Nonce.    R.  &  B.  3  :  357.     C.  554. ' 
Nonchalance.     R.  &  B.  3 :  401.    C. 

595.     120. 
Non-excluding.    Red   Cott.  5 :  23. 

C.  745.     32. 
Nonsense-writing.     Fr.  Fu.  6 :  341. 

C.  970. 
Noon-disport.      Prol.   Fif.   4:383. 

C.  702. 
Noon  -  heats.      Para.   1 :  111.      C. 

44. 
Noon-oppression.   Joch.  0 :  219.    C 

921. 
Noon  -  streaks.     Para.  1 :  29.      C. 

13. 
Noon-sun.     Prol.  Fif.  4:382.     C. 

701. 
Noonday-hour's.  Flute-M.  6 :  421 ; 

7:7.5.     C.  1000.     112. 
Noonday-Ughted.     King  C.  1 :  397. 

C.  156. 
Norbert.      In     a    B.    4:145.      C. 

309. 
North.     R.  &  B.  3:396.     C.  569, 
245- 

Two  Poets,  0 :  92.     C.  865, 

234. 
North    England.      Hal.    &    Hob, 

6 :  128.     C.  879. 
North-fire.    Eas.-Day,  4:49.      C. 

333. 
North-parts.     Flight,   2:309.      C. 

278. 
Nose.     Chris.-Eve,  4  :  29.     C.  326, 

193. 
Sludge,    4:233.      C.    402, 

97. 

Fifine,  4 :  388.     C.  704. 

Ponte  A.  6 :  409  ;  7 :  50.     C. 

995.     24. 
Nose-breadth.     Inn  A.  5  :  271.     C. 


R.  &  B.  3:61.      C, 
Epil.     Pacch. 
C.  925. 
Ixion,    6:210.       C. 


784. 
Nose -tip, 

438. 
Nosegay  -  smell. 

5  :  393.     C.  829. 
Nostrum.    Joch.  6:227. 

54. 
Not  -  Tliou. 

918. 
Not-as-yet-convinced.    Chris.-Eve, 

4:7.     C.  318. 
Not-fulfilled-at-all.    Agam.  6  :  29. 

C'._.S4]._ 
Not-incurious.     Karsh.   4 :  64.     C. 

338. 
Not-silly.    R.  &B.  3:42.     C.  431. 

17. 


426 


Not-BO-great 


INDEX 


Ocean-girt 


Not-so-great.    Two  Poets,  6 :  110. 

C.  «72. 
Not-so-much-perverse.     R.   &   B. 

3 :  Ho.     C.  589.     256. 
Not-unpleasant.      R.   ife  B.  3:20. 

C.  422.     82. 
Note.    Balau.4:293.    0.614.    97- 
Notes.     Pied  Piper,  2 :  28G.   C.  270. 

169. 
Noteworthy.      Prince    H.   4  :  373. 

C.  ()98.     206. 
Nothing.     FUght,  2 :  293.      C.  272. 

55- 

R.   &  B.  3:142.     C.  471. 

249. 

J.    Lee,    4:  ICO,      C.    375. 

18. 

Death  in  D.  4 :  196.     C.  387. 

178. 

Epil.  Cher.  6 :  265.     C.  939. 

270. 
Nothings.    R.  &  B.  3:  25.    C.  424. 
248. 

R.   &  B.  3:120.     C.  462. 

14. 
Nothingness.    R.  &  B.  3  :  232.    C. 
507.     269. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  236.     C.  508. 

R.   &  B.  3:441.     C.   587. 

187. 

Ber.  de  M.  6 :  297.     C.  953. 

288. 
Notice.      Fifine,   4:428.      C.   727. 

218. 
Notice-worthy.      Inn    A.     5 :  273. 

C.  785. 
Novel.    Ari.  A.  5:125.     C.  638. 

117. 
Novelty.    R.  &  B.  3:  21.     C.  423. 

46. 
November.     By  Fire.  2:60.      C. 

185. 
Novercal.      R.   &   B.  3:44.      C. 

431. 
Novice  -  brain.     Red  Cott,  5 :  38. 

C.  751.  . 
Novice  -  queen.     Sor.  1 :  252.      C 

98. 
Now.     King  C.  1:404.     C.   159. 

120. 
Now-affianced.    Soul's  Tr.  2:  341. 

C.  290. 
Now-sparklest.     Pisgah  11.  5 :  343. 

C.  Sll.    239. 
Nudities.     Pacch.  5:320.     C.  803. 

189. 
Nugator%'.    R,   &  B.   3:339.     C. 
548.     50. 


Nun.    J.  Lee,  4:159.     C.  374. 
Nuncheon.      Pied    Piper,    2 :  285. 

C.  269. 
Nuncio.     Druses,  2:103.     C  199. 
Nurse-taught.     Two  Poets,  6 :  78. 

C.  859. 
Nymph  -  embraced.      Ger.   de   L. 

6 :  343.     C.  970. 


"  O  !  "    Old  Pict.  2 :  40.     C.  177. 

90. 
Oak.    R.&B.  3:130.     C.  466.    4. 
Oak-boles.    Sor.  1 :  214.     C.  83. 
Oak-galls.    Solil.  2 :  12.     C.  1(57. 
Oak-trunk.    Joch.  6 :  228,     C.  925. 

283. 
Oath-breaker.    Straf .   1 :  133.     C. 

51. 
Obduracy.     R,    &   B.  3:390.     C. 

567.     96. 
Obeah-man,      Lm  A,   5 :  286,     C 

790. 
Obedience.    Luria,  2:372.    C.  303. 

53- 

AbtV.4:183.     C.  383.    10. 

Prince   H.  4:336.     C.  684. 

174. 


Obey.    R.   &  B.  3:379.     C.  563. 

63. 
Numph.   5 :  351.        C.   814. 

246. 
Iv^n,  6:140.     C.  886.     154. 


Obeying.     R.&B.  3:  301.     C,  533. 

229. 
Obfuscated.    R.  &  B.  3:  351.     C. 

552.     280. 
Object.     Para.  1:89.    C.  36.     102. 
Obligation.    R.  &  B.  3 :  158.     C. 
477.     157. 

Dan.  Bar.  6:306.     C.  956. 

171. 
Observe.     R.  &  B.  3:  87.     C.  448. 

Obsolete.     Geo.  B.  D.  6:  326.     C. 

9()4.     134. 
Obstacles.    Druses,  2: 112.    C.  203. 
Obtain.     Fifine,   4:398.      C.   710, 
III. 

Pietro,  6 :  173.    C.902.   280. 

Obvious.    Sor.  1 :  228.    C.  88.    123. 

By  Fire.  2 :  (53.    C.  186.    20. 

Ocean.    Saul,  2:51.    C.  181.    246. 
Ocean-cave.     Pau.  1:3.     C.  3. 
Ocean-gLrt.    Two  Poets,  6 :  82,    C 


861. 


427 


Ocean-idleness 


INDEX 


Old-begotten 


Ocean-idleness.    Fifine,  4 :  385.    C. 
7U3. 

Fifine,  4:  424.     C.  725. 

Ocean  -  playfellow.       Prince    H. 

4 :  343.     C.  (i86. 
Ocean-plunder.     Popul.  2 :  91.     C. 

195. 
Ocean-space.   Lovers' Q.  2:  29.    C. 

173. 
Ocean-width.     Fifine,   4:388,     C. 

704. 
Odds.     R.  &   B.   3:26.      C.   424. 

131. 
CEconomy.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  342,     C. 

2!»1. 
O'er-balance.    Red  Cott.  5 :  83.    C. 

708. 
O'er-bloom.    Agam.6:51.    C.848, 
O'er-domes.     R.  &  B.  3:  443.     C. 

588.     248. 
O'er-festooning.  Sor.  1 :  208.  C.  80. 
O'er -frothed.     Pan,   6:189.      C. 

909. 
O'er  -  importuned.       One  Word, 

4:126.     C.  362. 
O'er-looked.    Colombe,2: 221.    C. 

247. 
O'er-past.     Colombe,  2:221.      C. 

247. 
O'er-refines,     Colombe,  2 :  202.    C. 

239.     215. 
O'er-rioted.    Red  Cott.  5:1,     C. 

736. 
O'er-rioting.     Red  Cott.  5 :  29.     C. 

747. 
O'er-roofing.      Agam.   6:  13,      C 

835. 
O'er -running.      Prol.   A.   6:390; 

7:2.     C.  987.     120. 
O'er-storied.      Cleon,   4:116.      C. 

359. 
O'er-sweep.    King  V.  1 :  388,     C. 

153.    275. 
O'er-toise.    Sor.  1 :  234.     C.  91. 
O'er-top.     Ber.  de  M.  6 :  298.     C. 

953.     249. 
O'er-whispered.    Popul.  2 :  91.    C. 

195. 
O'ercanopy.    Sor.  1 :  222.     C.  86. 
O'erflowered.     Nat.   Mag.   5:345. 

C.  811. 
O'erfrothed.     R,  &B.  3:56.     C. 

436.     168, 
O'erfruited.   Nat.  Mag.  5 :  345.    C. 

811. 
O'erstep.     Chris.   Sm.  6 :  317.     C. 

961.     127. 
O'erstrewn.    Para.  1 :  112.     C.  45. 


Off-casting.     Bad   D.   II.   6 :  3!K;  ; 

7  :  18.     C.  989. 
OfE-hand.     Master  H.   2:93.     C. 
196.     157. 

Englishm,   2:262.     C.  262, 

53- 

R.   &  B.  3:304.     C.  534. 

225. 

Doctor,  6 :  183.     C.  907. 

Off -scouring.     Pippa,  1 :  362.      C 

143. 
Off-starting.    Chas.  A.  6  :  361.    C. 

977. 
Off-striding.     Sor.  1 :  281.     C.  109. 
Offscouring.    R.  &  B.  3 :  196.     C. 

492,     186. 
Offence.     After,  2:87.      C.   194. 

47- 

R.   &  B.   3:101.     C.  454. 

164. 

Two  Poets,  6  :  83.     C.  861. 

33. 
Office-hall.    R.  &B.  3:90. 
Office-seat.   R.    &   B.   3:90,    C. 

449. 
Offuscate,    Chris,  Sm.  6 :  318,     C. 

961, 
Oft-catalogued.    Chris.  Sm.  6 :  316. 

C.  960. 
Oft-failing,    Para.  1 :  117.     C.  46. 

142. 
Oft-quoted.     Inn  A.  5:315.     C. 

802. 
Often-checked.    Para.  1 :  117,     C. 

46.     142. 
Ofter.     Para.  1 :  64.     C.  26. 
Oil.     Mul^y.6:165.     C.  898.    138. 
Oil-dripj)ers.     Imp.   Aug.   6  :  428 ; 

7  :  88.     C.  1002. 
Oil-drop.     Joch.  6:216.     C.  920. 
Oiljaint.     Bea.  Sig.  6  :  417 ;  7 :  67. 

Cf.  998.     179. 
Oily-bathed.     Ari.  A.  5 :  150.     C. 

648.     270. 
Olaf,  Sir.     Tray,  6  :  142.     C.  887. 
Old.     Para.  1 :  64.     C.  26.     258. 

Druses,  2  :  129.  C.  210.  119. 

Flight,  2 :  309.    C.278.    127. 

Childe  R,   2 :  333.     C,  287. 

209. 

R.  &B.3:37,  C.429,   241, 

R.   &  B.  3:331.     C.  544. 

186. 

Death  in  D.  4 :  196.     C.  387. 

178. 
Ari.  A.  5 :  159.     C.  652, 


Old-begotten,     Agam.   6 :  50.     (J. 

848. 


428 


Old-faced 


INDEX 


Orange-pulp 


Old-faced.     Chris.-Eve,  4:2.     C. 

316. 
Old-fangled.    Pied  Piper,  2:28.3, 

C.  209. 
Old-fashioned.    Para.  1 :  72.    C.29. 
Old-minded.      Flight,   2:291.     C. 

272. 
Old-style.     Red   Cott,  5:46.      C. 

7.53.     226. 
Old-wealthj'.      Agam.   0:30.      C. 

H41. 
Old -wife's.      Imp.   Aug.   6:428; 

7  :  88.     C.  K H)2. 
Old-world.     R.  &  B.    3:313.     C. 
538.     190. 

Two  Poets,  0 :  91,     C.  804. 

102. 
Chas.   A.  6 :  355,     C.  975. 

Chas.   A.   6 :  362.     C,  978, 

265. 
Older.    Soul's  Tr.  2  :  359.     C.  298. 

18. 
Oldish-young.    Inn  A,  5  :  245.     C, 

774, 
Olent.    R.  &  B.  3:327.     C.  543, 

43- 
Olive-bearing,    Ari,  A,  5 :  210,    C. 

072. 
Olive-branch.      Joch.   6 :  215,      C 

920. 
OHve-fraU.     St.   Prax,   4:90,     C. 

:^8. 
Olive-grounds.     Luria,  2  :  395.     C. 

312. 
Olive-groves.     Para.  1 :  97.     C.  39. 
Olive-pale.      J,   Lee,  4 :  155.      C. 

373.     274. 
Olive-stone.    Sor.  1 :  225.     C.  87. 
OUivier.    Red  Cott.  5  :  75.    C.  704. 
Ombrifuge.    R.  «fe  B.  3:  360.     C. 

557. 
Omen-bird,     Ari,   A.   5:237.     C. 

079. 
Omnibenevolence.   R.  &  B.  3  :  447, 

C.  5i)0.     176. 
Omnipotence.    PUlar,   6 :  270,     C. 

941.     33. 
Omniscience.      Prince  H,   4  :  344. 

C.  (>S7.     106, 
Omoplat,     R.   &  B,  3:145.      C. 

472. 
On-rushing.    Agam.  6:  34.    C.84.3. 
Once.      Women   &   R.   2:85.     C. 
193.     143. 

In  a   B.   4  :  151.      C.   372. 

148. 
Once-men.    Sludge,  4 :  241.  C.406. 


One.     Pau.  1 :  15.     C.  7.     64. 

Para.  1 :  52.     C.  22.     72. 

Flight,  2:291.    C.272.     96. 

In  a  B.   4:131,       C.   304. 


137- 
Balau.4:327.    C.627. 


266. 
One-arched.     By  Fire.   2:61,     C. 

186, 
One-benched,     Balau,  4 :  205.     C. 

603. 
One-eyed.     Red  Cott.   5:91.     C. 

111. 
One-frontleted.    Balau.  4:286.    C. 

611. 
One-voiced.    Agam. 6:. 30.    C, 843. 
Onesimus,    R.   &   B.   3:190.     C. 

492. 
Onion-bulb.     Ivkn,  0:137.    C.884. 
Onion-peelings.  Sludge,  4 :  243.    C. 

407. 
Onion-stone.    St.  Prax.  4 :  89.     C 

348. 
Oozing,    St,  Prax,  4:91,     C,  349. 

33. 
Open.     Red  Cott.   5:17.     C.  743, 

191. 
Open-breasted.     Count  G.  2:237. 

C.  253. 
Open-chase.     Flight,  2 :  289.      C. 

271. 
Open-heari;ed.    Muldy.  0 :  104.    C. 

897. 
Open-mouthed.     Sludge,    4  :  246. 

C.  408. 
Opened.      Karsh,   4:67.      C.   339. 

106. 
Operant.      Joch.   6:231,     C.  926, 

176. 
Operosity,     Ohas.  A.  6 :  358,     C. 

970, 
Opinion.      Prince  H,   4 :  366,      C. 

095.     199. 
Opportunity.     Ari.  A.  5 :  121.     C. 
037.     191. 

Joch.  0 :  213.     C.  919.     182. 

Opposites.     Red  Cott.  5:44,     C, 

753.     65. 
Opposition.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  3.39.     C. 

290,     228, 
Oppressed.      Iloly-C.   2:319.      C, 

282.     64. 
Oppression.      Ari.   A,   5:100.     C. 
029.     195. 

Ber.  de  M.  6 :  296.     C.  952. 

119. 
Oracle-speaker,    Agam,  6 :  44.    C. 

846. 
Orange-pulp.    Solil,2:13.    C.  168. 


429 


Orb 


INDEX 


Out-vrarbles 


Orb.    Ber.  de  M.  6:296.     C.  952. 

66. 
Fr.    Fu.  6:332,       C.  966. 

2l6. 

Orchard.     K.  &  B.  3 :  335.     C.  546. 

12. 

Orchard-bough.    Para.   1 :  95.     C. 

38. 
Orchard-grafted.    Ari.  A.  5 :  155. 

C.  650. 
Orchard-grounds.    Red  Cott.  5 :  17. 

C.  742. 
Orchard-thief.      Chas.   A.   6:354. 

C.  974. 
Orchard-tree.     R.  &B.3:256.    C. 

516. 
Orchard's.      Bean-St.   6:282.     C. 

946.     log. 
Ordained.    Para.  1:69.    C.28.    53. 
Order.     Druses,   2 :  104.      C.  2U0. 

221. 
Ordure-comer.     R.   &   B.   3:204. 

C.  495. 
Ordure-heap.    Ari.  A.  5  :  110.     C 

632. 
Ordure  -  smirch.     Ari.   A.  5:171. 

0.  656. 
Ore-bed.    Fust,  6 :  380.     C.  985. 
Oreichalch.    At  the  M.  5 :  333.    C. 

808. 
Orgagna.     Old  Pict.  2 :  44.    C.  178. 
Organ-fingering.  Chris.-Eve,  4  :  16. 

C.  321. 
Organ-loft.      R.  &  B.  3:35.     C. 

428.     72. 
Organ-peal.     Chas.  A.  6 :  364.     C. 

978.     13. 
Organs.     Prol.  Dra.  I.  2d.  6 :  153. 

C.  8!)2.     115. 
Organist.      Chas.   A.   6:355.      C. 

975.     172. 
Orgasm.     Two    Poets,   6:95.     C. 

866. 
Oriolo,  Marchese  dell'.     Cenciaja, 

5  :  3(;9.     C.  821. 
Orris-root.    Fra  Lippo,  4  :  81.     C. 

345. 
Ossa.    Fr.Fu.  6:331.     C.  966.    i. 
Ossifrage.     Balau.  4  :  266.    C.  603. 
Osteria.     R.  &  B.  3  :  54.     C.  435. 
Ostrich-thighed.    Thro'  Met.  2 :  7. 

C.  165. 
Other.    Para.  1 :  63.     C.  26.     253. 
Other-fashioned.    Ari,   A.  5  :  22(). 

C.  675. 
Other-minded.    Fifine,4:392,     C. 

707. 
Otter.    Caliban,  4 :  208.     C.  392. 


Ottima.    Pippa,  1 :  333.     C.  131. 
Ottoboni.     R.  &  B.  3:237.      C. 

509. 
Out.     R.&B.3:105.    C.  456.    63. 
Out-bang.     Bishop  B.  4  :  100.     C. 

352. 
Out-blazed.     Ari.   A.   5 :  107.     C. 

631, 
Out-bolting.    R.  &  B.  3:  461.     C. 

595.     67. 
Out-breaking.     Karsh.   4:66.     C 

339. 
Out-broke.      Ber.   de  M.   6  :  300. 

C.  954.     245. 
Out-bulged.      Fifine,   4:413.      C. 

719. 
Out-ferreted.     Old  Pict.  2  :  42.     C. 

177. 
Out-flash.    Pau.  1 :  21.     C.  9. 
Out-fly.    Lovers' Q.  2:  31.    C.  173. 
Out-frothed.      Agam.   6:31.      C. 

842. 
Out-glittering.    Red   Cott.   5  :  44. 

C.  753. 
Out-hewing.    Sor.  1 :  .303.     C.  118, 
Out-Homering,     Prince  H,  4 :  377, 

C.  700. 
Out -imaged.      Agam.  6:37.      C 

844. 
Out-labors.     Ari.  A.  5:187.      C. 

6()3. 
Out-nature.    Sor.  1  :  320.     C.  125. 
Out-o'-the-way.    Shop,  5 :  339.    C. 

809. 
Out-of-the-way.    R.  &  B.  3:282. 

C.  526. 
Out-of-door.      Agam.  6 :  25.      C. 

839. 
Out-of-sight.      Agam.   6 :  16.      C. 

836. 
Out-ploughed.    Agam.  6  :  17.     C. 

836. 
Out-portion.    Sor.  1 :  292.     C.  113. 
Out-roared.      Pacch.   5 :  321.      C. 

803. 
Out-smoothing.      Ari.   A.   5  :  103. 

C.  630.     242. 
Out-soul.    Sor.  1 :  245.     C.  95. 
Out-staggering.     Sor.  1 :  195.     C. 

75. 
Out-standest.    Sor.  1 :  240.     C.  93, 
Out-stretch.     Pau.  1 :  19.     C.  9. 
Out-sweeten.    Red  Cott.  5  :  84.    C. 

768. 
Out-thrust,     Incident,  2  :  231,     C, 

251, 
Out-warbles.     Fifine,  4:395.     C. 

709. 


430 


Out-'world 


INDEX 


Over-riot 


Out-world.    Sor.  1 :  210.     C.  81. 
Out-wormed.      Joch.   G :  2;5().      C. 

92G. 
Out-wom.      Ari.   A.    5 :  217.      C. 

672. 
Outbreak-signal.     R.  &  B.  3 :  373. 

C  5()(). 
Outlet.    R.&B.  3:437.     C.  586. 

277. 
Outrage.     Soul's  Tr.   2:339.     C. 
200.     153. 

R.  &  B.  3:129.      C.  465. 

32. 

R.  &   B.  3:437.      C.  586. 

277. 

Ari.    A.   5  :  238.        C.   680. 

206. 
Outside.     Fifine,   4:400.     C.   711. 

222 

Flute-M.  6 :  424 ;  7 :  80.     C. 

1001.     8. 

Rev.    6:435;    7:104.       C. 

1005.     183. 
Outside-flesh.       Pan,   6:189.      C. 

909. 
Outside-frame.    By  Fire.  2:59.  C. 

185. 
Outside-straining.     Ari.  A.  5 :  128. 

C.  640. 
Outstreats.     Ned  B.   6:147.      C. 

890. 
Outstrips.     Sor.   1:286.      C.   111. 

117. 
Outthrob.      R.  &   B.  3:210.      C. 

498. 
Outward.    Balau.  4 :  296.     C.  615. 
21. 

Fifine,    4  :  393.        C.    707. 

21. 
Outward-borne.    Time's  R.  2 :  252. 

C.  258. 
Over-armed.    R.  &  B.  3 :  388.     C. 

566.     125. 
Over-belief.     R.   &  B.  3:20.     C. 

422. 
Over -bold.      Agam.    6:14.       C 

835. 
Over-bowed.     Last  R.  2:279.     C. 

267. 
Over  -  brimming.      Balau.    4 :  275. 

C.  607. 
Over-burly.     R.    &   B.  3:77.     C. 

444.     226. 
Over-concentrating.    Luria,  2 :  380. 

C.  30(j. 
Over  -  curious.      Colonibe,  2:  223, 

C.  248. 
. Joch.  6:230.     C.  926.    81. 


Over-daring.    Ger.  de  L.  6 :  ;549. 

C.  973. 
Over -deep.      Pippa,    1:329.      C. 

129. 
Over-enei^ry.    R.  &  B.  3:67.     C: 

440. 
Over-estimate.     Prince  H.  4 :  .338. 

C.  (i.S4. 
Over -filled.     Flight,    2:292.      C. 

277. 
Over -fond.      Druses,   2:116.      C 

205. 
Over  -  freight.      Chris. -Eve,  4:19. 

Over-friendlv-      R.    &   B.   3:  313. 

C.  538.     86. 
Over-full.     Agam.  6:  36.     C.  841. 
Over-garment.     Two  Cam.  6:260. 

C.  938. 
Over-greediness.    Camel-D.  6 :  257. 

C.  9;it). 
Over-harsh.     R.  &  B.  3  :  159.     C. 

477.     277. 
Over  -  haste.      Pietro,   6 :  175.      C. 

903. 
Over-hasty.      R.   &  B.  3:5.      C. 

4i(;._ 

Over-joyousness.     Sor.  1 :  287.     C. 

112. 
Over -lean.      Pippa,    1:342.      C. 

135. 
Over-likely.     Sor.  1 :  229.     C.  89. 
Over-loyal.     R.   &  B.  3:402.     C. 

572. 
Over-luscious.     R.  &  B.  3:  88.    C. 

449. 
Over-match.     Sor.  1 :  265.     C.  103. 
Over-moimts.     Bean-St.  6 :  276.  C. 

944. 
Over-nice.     Shah  A.   6:244.      C. 

931. 
Over-night.     R.  &  B.  3:  264.     C. 

519. 
Over-palpitation.     Inn  A.  5:301. 

C.  796.     105. 
Over-pensive.     R.  &  B.  3:  335.    C. 

546.     193. 
Over-poetical.    Sor.  1 :  244.    C.  95. 

253- 
Over-radiant.     Para.   1 :  121.      C. 

48. 
Over -reached.      King  V.    1:391. 

C.  154. 
Over-readv.    R.&B.  3:299.     C. 

532.     108. 
Over-rich.      R.   &   B.   3:39.      C. 

429.     208. 
Over-riot.    Sor.  1 :  198.     C.  77. 


431 


Over-scrupulous 


Over-scrupulous.  Soul's  Tr.  2 :  339. 

C.  2i)U. 
Over  -  sea.      Druses,    2 :  104,      C. 

20(). 
Over-serious.      Straf .   1 :  192.      C. 

74.     290. 
Over-smoked.    Up  —  Down,  2 :  32. 

C.  174. 
Over-smooth.     R.  &B.3:325.    C. 

542. 
Over4ubtle.    King  C.  1:400.     C. 

158. 
Over-teaching.     R.   &   B.  3:285. 

0.527.    255. 
Over-vigilant.      R.    &   B.   3:137, 

C.  469.     53. 
Over-vi^^tl.     R.   &   B.  3:74,      C. 

443.     205. 
Over-wide.    R.   &  B.  3:437.     C. 

586.     277. 
Over-zeal.    R.   &  B.  3:306.     C. 

535. 
Over-zealous.      Sor.    1  :  196.      C. 
76. 

R.   &  B.   3:191.     C.  490. 

43- 
Overeaution.     Luria,   2 :  365.      C. 

300.     185. 
Overcome.     R.   &  B,  3:254.     C. 

515.     205. 
Overhazard.      Luria,    2 :  365.      C. 

300.     185. 
Overlooked.     Para.  1 :  41.     C.  17. 

20. 

Overlooking.     King  V.  1:371.    C. 

14(;.     38. 
Overrooted.     Love,  2 :  26.     C.  172. 
Overscale.      CaUban,    4:211.      C. 

393. 
Overscored.     Love,  2 :  26.     C  172. 
Overshades.     Bean-St.  6: 271.     C. 

942.     66. 
Overtasks.      Ari.   A.   5 :  120.      C. 

636.     284. 
Overworked.     Ari,  A.  5 :  118.     C. 

636.     67. 
Ovid.    R.   &  B.  3:300.     C.  5.33. 

130. 
Owl-eyes.     R.   &  B.  3:229,     C, 

505.     185. 
Owl-like.     R.   &  B.  3:429.      C. 

582. 
Owl-shield.      Baku.     4:267.      C. 

604. 
Owl-wide.     R.   &  B.   3:37.      C. 

429, 
Owl's-wing,    Prince  H,  4:  335,    C. 

683. 


INDEX  Pain 

Fr,  Fu,  6:333,     C,  WH. 
C.  513. 


Owns, 

45. 
Ox,     R.   &   B.  3:250. 

25- 
R.   &   B.  3:411.      C.  575. 

228. 

R.  &  B.  3:  4.36.     C,  .585, 

Two  Poets,  6:  85,     C.  862. 

184. 
Ox-size,    Fifine,  4:416,     C.   720. 

98-   ,      , 
Ox-whitening.     Prince   H.   4:379 

C.  700. 


Pacchia.    Pacch.  5 :  318.     C.  802. 
Padding.      R.   &   B,  3:155,      C. 
476.     243, 

R.  &  B.  3 :  436.     C.  585. 

Paddock.      Eas.-Day,    4:55.      C. 
335,     46. 


Page,  Rosamund.  Mar.  Rel.  6: 120. 

C.  876. 
Page. 


Para.  1:120,     C,  47.     181, 
R.   &  B.    3:343.     C.  549. 

122 

Red    Cott.    5:5.      C.   738. 

91. 

Dev.  6 :  431 ;  7 :  94.    C.  1003. 

229. 
Page.     Pippa,  1 :  .349.     C.  137. 
Page-boy's.      Dev.   6:429;    7:89. 

C.  1002. 
Pageant-city's.      Sor.   1 :  313,      C. 

122. 
Pageant-king.     R.   &  B.  3:460. 

C.  594, 
Pageant -world.     A   Blot,  2:178. 

C,  230, 
Paid,    Geo,  B,  D.  6:  320.     C.  962, 

2, 
Pain,    Two  in  C,  2:73,     C,  189. 
181. 

Serenade,    2:7.3.      C.    189. 

60, 

Glove,     2:250,        C.      257. 

104. 
Childe  R.  2:332.     C.  287. 


277. 

R.    &    B 

3:80. 

C. 

445. 

204. 
R.   &  B. 

188. 
R.   &  B. 

3:387. 
3:396, 

c. 
c. 

566, 
569. 

122. 

R.   &  B, 

160, 

3:399, 

c. 

571. 

432 


Pain 


INDEX 
C.  579. 
C.    375. 


Pain.    R.   &  B.   3:421 

i88 
J.    Lee,    4:1G0. 

289. 

La  S.  6 :  60.     C.  852.     188. 

Fr.    Fu.    6:338.      C.    969. 

61. 
Fr.    Fu.    6:339.      C.    969, 

187. 
Specul.    6 :  .394  ;   7 :  13.      C. 

989,     138. 
Pain-throb.    Saul,  2 :  57.     C.  184. 

207. 
Pain-twisted.    In  a  B.  4:137.     C. 

366.     232. 
Paint.     Fra  Lippo,  4 :  78.     C  344. 

232. 
Bishop  B,  4:104.     0,354, 

244. 
One  Word,  4 :  125,     C.  362, 

45-     287. 
Ari.    A.    5:148.      C.    647. 

155. 
Fr.    Fu.    6:339.      C.    969. 

76.  . 
Paint  -  disguise.      Forgiv.    5 :  368. 


Pacch.    5:322.      C. 


C.  820. 
Paint  -  pot. 

804. 
Paint -smutches.      Flight,  2:307. 

C.  278. 
Pauiter.    R.  &  B.  3: 438,     C,  586, 
227. 

Balau.  4 :  328.     C.  627. 

Painter  -  priest.      Fr.   Fu.   6:328. 

C.  964. 
Painter-sort.    Sludge,  4:242.     C. 

406. 
Painter-theologian.  Fr.  Fu.  6 :  334. 

C.  967. 
Painter's.     Fr.  Fu.  6 :  329.    C.  965. 

189. 
Painter's-freak.      Ari.   A.   5  :  164. 

C.  654. 
Painter's  -  practice.      Fil.    Bald. 

5 :  380.     C.  825. 
Painters.    Pacch.  5 :  320.     C.  803. 

189. 
Painting.      Chas.   A.   6:359.      C. 

976.     190. 
Painting-brush.    Fra  Lippo,  4 :  82. 

C.  345. 
Paired.    Last  R.  2 :  280.     C.  268. 

lOI. 

Pairing-time.    Sludge,  4 :  250.     C. 

409. 
Palace  -  brain.     Eas.-Day,    4 :  50. 

C.  333. 


Palette 
Ari.  A.  5:203.     C. 


Colombe,  2:188. 


Palace-cleft 

668. 
Palace-clock.     Bishop  B.   4:108. 

C.  356. 
Palace-core.     Balau.  4 :  311.      C. 

621. 
Palace-feast.    In  a  B.  4 :  132.     C. 

3W. 
Palace-gate.    R.  &  B.  3 :  52.     C. 

4;j4. 

Palace-home.    Ari.  A.  5 :  112.     C 

633. 
Palace-life.    Red  Cott.  5 :  22.     C. 

744. 
Palace-panes.    Red  Cott.  5:2.    C. 

737. 
Palace  -  portal 

C.  234. 
Palace  -  quarry.      Forgiv.    5  :  363. 

C.  818. 
Palace-roofs.    Ari.  A.  5 :  205.     C. 

669. 
Palace  -  rooms.      King  V.   1 :  371. 

C.  146.     55. 
Palace-sheU.     R.  &  B.  3:75.     C. 

443. 
Palace-side.    R.  &  B.  3 :  260.     C. 

517. 
Palace-step.    R.  &  B.  3:44.     C. 

431. 
Palace -walls.     Crist.  6:203.     C. 

915. 
Palace  -  warfare.       Straf .    1 :  154. 

C  59.    242. 
Palace-window.     Bea.  Sig.  6 :  416 ; 

7 :  65.     C.  998. 
Palaced.     Red    Cott.  5:37.      C. 

750. 
Palaistra-tool.     Ari.  A.  5:152.    C 

649. 
Pale.      A  Blot,  2:175.      C.  229. 
235. 

Porph.     2:329.       C.    286. 

144. 
Pale-blue.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  346.     C. 

293. 
Pale-faced.    Stat.  «fe  B.  2 :  326.    C. 

285. 
Pale-haired.     R.  &  B.  3  :  284,     C. 

527. 
Pale-red.    Sor.  1 :  254.     C.  98. 
Pale-swathed.    Ari.  A.  5: 127.    C. 

639. 
Paled-off.     Red  Cott.  5:16.     C. 

742. 
Palette.    Red  Cott.  5 :  33.     C.749. 

II. 


433 


Paling 


INDEX 

C.  273 


Paling.     Flight,   2:294 

28. 
Paling-gaps.     Chris.-Eve,  4 : 1.    C. 

;u(). 

Palm.     Red  Cott.  5:71.     C.  7()3. 

Palm-branch.     R.  &B.3:4G9.    C. 

598. 
Palm-breadth.     Red  Cott.   5:64. 

C.  7()0. 
Palm-frond.     Bean-St.  6  :  274.     C. 

943. 
Palm -leaf.     Inn  A.   5:303.      C. 

797. 
Palm-screen.     Plot-C.   6:266.     C. 

940. 
Palm*  -  stock.      Sor.   1  :  275.      C. 

107. 
Palm-tree-cinctured.     Eas.  -  Day, 

4 ;  46.     C.  332. 
Palm-tree-edged.      Glove,    2:249. 

C.  257. 
Palm-wine.    Saul,  2:53.     C.  182. 
Palm-wreathed.     Para.  1 :  38.     C. 

16. 
Palms.    J.   Lee,  4:160.      C.   375. 

19. 
Palma.    Sor.  1 :  214.     G.  83. 
Palmer  -  worm.     Sor.    1 :  207.      C. 

80. 
Palsy -fixed.     Inn  A.  5:292.     C. 

793. 
Palsy-smitten.     R.   &   B.   3:162. 

C.  478. 
Palsy  -  struck.      Sor.   1 :  318.      C. 

124. 
Paltry.    R.  &  B.  3:190.     C.  490. 

Pampers.     Fifine,  4  :  427.     C.  726. 

181. 
Pamphylax.     Death  in  D.  4  :  191. 

C.  385. 
Pan.     R.   &   B.  3:447.      C.  590. 
25. 

Phei.  6 :  126.     C.  878. 

Panciatichi.    R.  &  B.  3:404 


Parent-like 
Fifine,    4:425.       C. 


Pantaloon 

726. 
Pantoufle.    R.  &   B.  3:116.     C. 

4ti0.     228. 
Paolo.     R.  *fcB.  3:39.     C.  429. 
Paolo-ward.     R.  &  B.  3:  117.     C. 

460. 
Paper-cheat.    Sludge,   4:252.     C. 

410. 
Paper-friction.    Two  Poets,  6 :  94. 

C.  865.     121. 


Fust,    6:379. 
Saul,    2:54. 


Paper  -  like 

984. 
Pajjer  -  reeds 

182. 
Paper -strips.     Fust,   6:375.      C 

983. 
Paper-twist.     R.  &  B.  3: 198.     C. 

493 
Papiifianian.     R .  &  B .  3 :  279.     C. 

525. 
Papist.      Chris.-Eve,    4:21.      C. 

323.     264. 
Parade-giound.     R.  &  B.  3:122. 

C.  462. 
Parade's.      In    a   B.   4:132.      C. 

364. 
Paradisal.     R.  &  B.  3:125.      C. 

464. 
Paradise.     Stat.  &  B.  2  :  323.     G. 

284.     107. 

Fifine,     4:403.        C.     713. 

31. 
Paradise-door.    Adam,  6 :  207.    C. 

916. 
Paradox.    Ben  Ezra,  4 :  186.     C. 
384.     71. 
Joch.  6:230.     C.926._  114. 


Pander-pair.    R.  &  B.  3:  441. 

588. 
Pandulph.     Bishop  B.  4  :  103. 

354. 
Panic-smit.     Ari.   A.   5 :  147. 

647. 
Panic-stricken.    Ber.  de  M.  6 :  296, 

C.  952. 
PanicoUus.    R.  &  B.  3:306.     C 


Pansies.    Para.  1 :  64.     C.  26. 


Parallel.     R.&B.3:159.     C.  477. 

ParLite.      R.   &  B.   3:366.      C. 

557.     120. 

Parasite-growth.  R.  «fe  B.  3:  304. 

C.  534. 
Paravent.    R.   &   B.   3:366.      C. 

557.  ^     ^, 

Pardon.      Straf.  1:187.      C.    72. 

160. 
R.    &    B.  3:45.      C.   432. 

R.^  &'  B.   3  :  379.     C.  562. 

271. 
Numph.    5:348.      C.    813. 

187. 
Parent-hearth.     R.   &  B.   3:114. 


C.  459_. 
Parent-like. 
450. 
434 


R.  &  B.  3:91.     C. 


Parent-river 


INDEX 

Pau.  1 :  19.  C. 
C. 
C. 


Parent  -  river 

9. 
Parent-wise.     Balau.   4 :  30G. 

619. 
Parents.      R.    &    B.    3:141. 

470.     7. 
Parents '-precept.    R.  &  B.  3  :  48. 

C.  433. 
Pariah.     Fifine,  4 :  394.     C.  708. 
Paris-drainag-e.    Red  Cott.  5 :  86. 

C.  769. 
Paris  -  manufacture.      Red    Cott. 

5  :  20. _  C.  743. 
Paris-prints.     Lady,  6  :  406 :  7  :  44. 

C.  994. 
Paris-proof.    Red  Cott.  5  :  31.     C. 

748. 
Paris-traf&c.    Red  Cott.  5  :  46.    C. 

753. 
Paris-ward.     Two  Poets,  6:105. 

C.  870. 
Parish-priest.     Inn  A.  5:281.     C. 

788. 
Parish-stocks.     Ned  B.  6:145.     C. 

888 
Park-feeding.      Don.   6 :  197.      C. 

912. 
Park-keeper.     Red  Cott.  5 :  87.  C. 

769. 
Paries.     Marching,  2: 1.     C.  163. 
Parlous.     R.  &  B.  3:7.     C.  417. 

i88 
Parne's.     Phei.  6: 126.     C.  878. 
Parrot-bird.     Forgiv.  5 :  365.      C. 

819.     121. 
Parrot-wise.     Chas.  A.  6 :  354.     C. 

975. 
Parsley-sprigs.     R.  &   B.   3:291. 

C.  530. 
Part.     Prince  H.  4:340.     C.  685. 
66. 

Ari.    A.    5:131.      C.    641. 

257. 

Sun,  6 :  251.     C.  934. 

Part-messenger.     R.  &  B.  3  :  201. 

C.  494. 
Part -mistress.     R.  &   B.  3:201. 

C.  494. 
Part -payment.     R.    &   B.  3:83. 

C.  447.     117. 
Part-sigh.     Sor.  1 :  211.     C.  82. 
Part-smile.    8or.  1 :  211.     C.  82. 
Part-wise.    Prince  H.  4 :  367.     C. 

6iH). 
Partial-ravage.     Red  Cott.  5 :  27. 

C.  746. 
Partial-ruin.     Red  Cott.  5:  26.    C. 

746.     211. 


Passion's 

C. 

C. 


Particle.      Red    Cott.    5:75. 

765.     177. 
Parties.      Soul's    Tr.   2 :  355. 

296.     251. 
Partition -wall.     Gondola,  2:2(^4. 

C.  262. 
Partly-guarded.    Red  Cott.  5:  16. 

C.  742. 
Partners.       Bad     D.    II.    6:395; 

7 :  16.     C.  989.     259. 
Partook.      R.  &   B.  3:431.      C: 

583.     39. 
Partridge-Avise.     R.  &  B.  3:437. 

C.  586. 
Pash.     King  C.  1 :  398.     C.  157. 
Pashed.     Ari.  A.  5 :  119.     C.  636. 
Pasquin.      R.    &    B.   3:226.      C. 

504. 
Pass.       Luria,     2:377.       C.    305. 
285. 

Ari.    A.    5 :  147.      C.    647. 

291. 
Pass-book.      Inn  A.   5:247.      C. 

775. 
Pass-word.     R.  &  B.  3:448.     C. 

590.     218. 
Passage.      R.    &    B.   3:387.      C. 
566.     136. 

Adam,     6:207.       C.     916. 

160. 
Passage-lengths.     Red  Cott.  5 :  46. 

C.  753. 
Passed.      Fra    Lippo,    4:80.      C. 

345.     179. 
Passer-by.     R.    &  B.  3:108.      C. 

456. 
Passers-by.    R.    &   B.  3:59.      C. 

437.     205. 
Passing-by.     Red   Cott.  5:9.      C. 

739. 
Passion.       Para.     1:99.       C.    40. 
260. 

Old    Pict.   2:40.      C.   177. 

255. 

Porph.     2:329.        C.     286. 

195- 

R.   &    B.   3:235.      C.   508. 

196. 

J.    Lee,    4:104.      C.    376. 

9. 

Fifine,     4:402.        C.     713. 

218. 

Fr.    Fu.    6:338.      C.    968, 

132. 
Passion-protesters.     Ixion,  6:210. 


C.  917. 
Passion's.     Chas.   A.   6:359. 
976.     190. 
435 


Passionate 


INDEX 


Peace 


Passionate.    Stat.  &  B.  2 :  327.    C. 

2sr).   70. 

Red  Cott.  5 :  29.    C.  747.  27. 

Past.     Para.  1 :  !)7.     C.  m.     205. 

Sor.  1 :  247.     C.  9(5. 

King  C.  1 :  410.     C.  161 . 

Lovers'  Q.  2:30.     C.  173. 

290. 
ChUde  R.  2:333.     C.  288. 

18. 
Luria,     2:368.        C.     302. 


259. 
■R.   &  B.  3:103. 


C.  454. 
C.  525. 
C.  589. 


^57-  „ 
R.   &  B.  3:278. 

266. 
R.   &   B.  3:445. 

159. 

Worst,  4:  171.     C.  378.    62. 

Ben  Ezra,  4:188.     C.  384. 

88. 
Ari.    A.    5:108.      C.    632. 

271. 

Never,  6 :  235.     C.  928.    88. 

Bean-«t.    6:277.      C.   942. 

159- 

Dan.   Bar.  6:310.     C.  958. 

194. 

Bea.  Sig.  6 :  415  ;  7 :  64.     C. 

997.     82. 
Pasturage.     Para.   1:111.     C.  44. 

276. 
Pasture -fed.      Agam.   6:51.      C. 

M-19. 
Pasture-ground.     Bean-St.  6 :  274. 

C.  943. 
Pasture-place.     R.    &    B.    3:148. 

C.  473.     33. 
Pasture-tract.     Two  Poets,  6:91. 

C.  864. 
Patavinian.    R.  &  B.  3:476.     C. 

601. 
Patch.     Bean-St.  6:275.     C.  943. 

188 
Patched -up.     Fifine,  4:432.      C. 

729.     204. 
Pathos.    R.  &B.  3:22.     C.  423. 

181. 
Patience.     R.  &B.  3:34.     0.428. 
278. 

R.   &  B.  3:124.     C.    463. 

156. 

R.   &  B.  3:434.     C.  585. 

218. 
Patient.     R.  &B.  3:78.     C.  445. 
38. 

Red   Cott.    5:8.      C.  739. 

243. 


Patient.    Paceh.  5:  328.     C.  806. 
Patient-long.    R.&B.  3:145.    C. 

472. 
Patmore.      Ned    B.    6:147.       C. 

889. 
Patriot-drudge.   Geo.  B.  D,  6 :  319. 

C.  961. 
Patron -friend.     Sor.   1:259.      C. 

101. 
Patron-ghosts.     Pippa,  1 :  344.    C 

136. 
Patron-god.    Ari.  A.  5:231.      C. 

()77. 
Pattern.    R.  &  B.  3:  99.     C.  453. 
203. 

Death  in  D.  4 :  205.     C.  391, 

167. 
Pattern-purity.   Ari.  A.  5:125.    C 

638. 
Pattern-proposing.    Ari.  A.  5 :  109. 

C.  632. 
Pauldron.    Sor.  1 :  300.     C.  117. 
Pauldron-rings.     Sor.  1 :  303.     C. 

118. 
PaiUine.     Pau.  1:1.     C.  2. 

One  Way,  2:7.5.     C.  190 


Pauhis.     Cleon,  4:122.     C.  361. 
Pauper-saints.     R.  &  B.  3:108. 

C.  457. 
Pause.     Colombe,  2:227.     C.  249. 
29. 

R.   &    B.    3:21.      C.   423. 

46. 
R.    &   B.   3:277.      C.  524. 

Aht    V.    4:185.      C.    383. 

224. 

Ari.    A.    5 :  238.      C.    680. 

20. 
Pausing-place.     Chfis.-Eve,   4 :  21. 

C.  323. 
Pavement.    R.   &  B.  3:371.     C. 

559.     109. 
Paven.      Lovers'    Q.    2:27.      C. 

172. 
Paving-stone.    R.  &  B.3: 174.    C. 

483.     221. 
Pavis.    Sor.  1 :  196.     C.  76. 
Pay.     Colombe,  2:212.     C.  243. 

28. 
R.    &   B.   3:334.      C.   546. 

122 

Prospice,   4:216.  C.    395. 

24. 

Paying.    Ari.  A.  5  :  122.  C.  637. 

200. 
Peace.    Pau.  1:9.     C.  5.  230. 
Pau.  1 :  13.    C.  7.  75- 


436 


789. 


c. 


Peace-in-strife.     Sor.   1 :  242, 

94. 
Peace-pledge.     Apol.  &  F.  6  :  294. 

C.  952. 
Peace-praisers.     Joch.  6:221.     C. 

922.     273. 
Peaceful.      Para.    1:84.      C.    34. 
258. 

Soul's  Tr.  2:345.     C.  292. 

194. 
Peach-blossom.     St.   Prax.   4:89. 

C.  348. 
Peacock-fans.     R.  &  B.  3 :  465.   C. 

597. 
Peacock  -  perch.      Sludge,   4 :  225. 

C.  399. 
Peacock-prince.    Two  Poets,  6 :  85. 

C.  862.     254. 
Peacock-tail.    R,  &B.3:424,     C. 

580.     239. 
Peacock's.     R.   &  B.  3:69.     C. 

441.    70. 
Peak.     Crist.   &  M,  6:203.     C. 

915,     240. 
Pearl.     Para.  1 :  46.     C.  19.     16. 

R.   &  B.  3:331.     C.  545. 

150. 

Mul^y.  6 :  167.     C.  890. 

Pearl-gift.    Joch.  6:213.     C.  919. 

182. 
Pearl-Uke.    Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  322.    C. 

%2. 
Pearl -moon.     Fifine,  4:388.      C. 

704. 
Pearl-pure.    R.  &  B.  3:470.     C. 

598.     75. 
Pearl-seed.    Crist.  2 :  18.     C.  169. 


Peace  INDEX 

Peace.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  .339.     C.  290. 

270. 
R.    &    B.    3:64.      C.   439. 

129. 
R.   &  B.  3:206.      C.  496. 

25- 
R.   &  B.  3:223.     C.   503. 

21. 
R.   &   B.  3:326.     C.  543. 

175. 
St.   Prax.    4:89.      C.  348. 

212. 
Two  Poets,  6 :  110.     C.  872. 

53- 

Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  321.     C.  962. 

Fr.    Fu.    6:338.      C.    968. 

157- 
Ger.  de  L.  6:  352.     C.  974. 

49- 
Peace-breaker.     Inn  A.  5 :  283.    C. 


Pen-driver 

Pearl -sheeted.     Sor.   1:239.     C. 

92. 
Pearl-teeth.    Englishm.  2 :  259.  C. 

2tj(). 
Pearl-white.    Sor.  1 :  244.     C.  95. 

Ari.  A.  5 :  161 .     C.  6.52. 

Pearls.     Flight,   2:309.      C.   279. 


R.  &  B.  3:287. 
C. 


C. 


248 
Peasant-friend 

C.  528. 
Peasant-like.     Fr.  Fu.  6 :  341. 

970.     179. 
Peasant-nurse.     R.   &   B.  3:321. 

C.  541. 
Peasant -Paul.     Sor,   1:235.      C. 

91. 
Peasant's-hat.     Imp.  Aug.  6 :  427 ; 

7 :  86.     C.  1002. 
Reason.     Pietro,   6:177.      C.  904. 

249. 
Pebble  -  pavement.      Red    Cott. 

5  :  29.     C.  747. 
Pebble-stones.      Para.   1 :  81.      C. 

33. 
Peccable.     R.    &   B.   3:311. 

537.     285. 
Peccant.      R.    &    B.   3:159.      C. 
477. 

Red  Cott.  5  :  80.     C.  766. 

Pedagogue.    R.  &  B.  3:149.     C. 

473.     189. 
Pedal -keyed.      Red   Cott.   5:74. 

C.  764. 
Peddler-like.    Red  Cott.  5 :  53.  C. 

756.     289. 
Peeping-place.     Mul^y.  6  :  165.    C 

898. 
Peer.     Sor.  1 :  221.     C.  85.     14. 
Peevish.      Straf.   1:138.      C.   53. 

27.. 
Peiraios-known.     Ari.  A.   5 :  113. 

C.  6:33. 
Peleus'.    Dev.  6:431;  7:93.     C. 

1003.     134. 
Pen.      Luria,     2:365.       C.     300. 
248. 

R.  &    B.  3:131.     C.  466. 

105. 

R.   &  B.  3:169.      C.  482. 

193- 

R.   &  B.  3:356.     C.  554. 

289. 

Ari.  A.  5 :  240.     C.  681. 

Pen-creation.     Fr.  Fu.  6 :  329.     C. 

mr,. 

Pen-door.    Saul,  2  :  48.     C.  180, 
Pen-driver.     Two  Poets,   6:10di 
C.  868, 


437 


Pen-point 


INDEX 
C. 


Pen-point.     R.  &  B.  3:250. 

5i;3. 

Pen-wise.     Pacch.  5  :  327.     C.  805. 

280. 
Pen's.     R.  &  B.  3:189.     C.  489. 

222. 
Penfold.      R.   &    B.   3:365.      C. 

557. 
Penance.    Worst,  4  :  171.     C.  378. 

60. 
Penance-fire.     Forg^v.  5  :  3(54.     C. 

81'.). 
Penance-sheet.     Count  G.   2  :  236. 

C.  253. 
Pencil-characters.     R.  &  B.  3:  85. 

C.  447. 
Pencil-mark.     Ari.  A.  5  :  170.     C- 

am.   46. 

Pencil  -  prie.     Bea.  Sig.   6  :  414  ; 

7:62.     C.     9!)7. 
Penelope.     Bea.  Sig.  6 :  417  ;  7 :  67. 

C.  998. 
Penetrate.      Ari.   A.   5:118.      C. 

636.     194. 
Penned.    R.  «&;  B.  3:  463.     C.  596. 

213. 
Penning.     Two  Poets,  6 :  85.      C. 

862.     loi. 
Pennon.     Fifine,  4 :  424.     C.  725. 
Penny-piece.    R.  &  B.  3 :  77.     C. 

444. 
Pent-house.    By  Fire.  2:62.      C. 

■186. 
Pent-up.     Ari.  A.  5 :  236.     C.  679. 

205. 
Penuriousness.      Red   Cott.  5 :  18. 

C.  743.     6. 
Penury.     R.  &  B.  3:  79.     C.  445. 
98. 

R.   &  B.  3 :  146.     C.  472. 

280. 
Peopled.     Balau.  4:270.     C.  605. 
168. 

Red  Cott.  5:19.     C.   743. 

230. 
Peplosed.      Ari.    A.    5:103.      C. 


6:30. 


Peptics'.     Prol.   Fer.   6:240.      C. 

929.     188. 
Pepusch.      Chas.    A.  6:356.      C. 

975. 
Perception's.    Sor.  1 :  229.     C.  89. 

252. 
Perch.     Sludge,  4:224.     C.  398. 

218. 
Perdition's.    R.   &   B.  3:91.     C. 

450,     214. 


Persuasion 
C.  346. 


Perfect.    Andrea,  4 :  85. 

223. 
Perieet-pure.     Fr.  Fu.  6  :  341.     C. 

970. 
Perfects.     Pretty  W.   2:78.      C. 

191.     3. 
Perfection.     Chris.-Eve,  4:3.     C. 
317.     67. 

Ben  Ezra,  4  :  187.     C.  384, 

182. 
Fr.    Fu.    6:333.      C.    967, 

275. 
Perfection.      Bad   D.   11.   6:398; 

7 :  19.     C.  990.     140. 
Perform.    A  Blot,  2  :  156.     C.  221. 

46. 
Performance.     Soul's  Tr.   2 :  352. 
C.  295. 

R.    &    B.   3:40.      C.  430. 

198. 
Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  320.     C.  962. 

197- 
Periander.     Fifine,  4:  416.    C.  720, 
Perida.    Joch.  6  :  217.     C.  920. 
Peril.     Sor.  1 :  19(5.     C.  76. 
Period.    Sor.  1 :  209.     C.  81.     38, 
Gram.  Fun.  2  :  312.     C.  280, 

249. 
Ari.    A.    5:142,      C.    645, 

220. 
Perish,      Luria,  2:366,      C.   301, 

124. 
R.   &  B.  3:162.     C.  478, 

214. 
Perishes.    Old  Pict.  2 :  40,    C.  177. 


185. 


Permanence.     Fifine,  4 :  439.     C. 

733.      29. 
Permissible.    R.  «fe  B.  3 :  346.     C. 
550.     257. 

R.   &   B.   3:368.      C.  558. 

116. 

R.   &  B,  3:419,     C,  578, 

203. 

Plot-C.    6:266.      C.    940, 

199. 
Permit.    R.&B.  3:331.     C.  545. 

158. 
Permits.    Mihrab,  6 :  253.     C.  935, 

224. 
Perpend.     Geo.  B.  D.  6  :  323,     C. 

9(;3. 

PersLstent.     Red   Cott.  5:53.     C, 

7'*).     201. 
Person.    Sludge,  4 :  226.     C.  399. 
Persuasion.    Prince  H.  4 :  3(56,    C, 

695,    90. 


438 


Pet-name  IXDEX 

How,  2:5.      C.   1&5. 
Fifine,   4:407.      C. 


Piled-up 


Pet-name. 

III. 
Petal  -  dew 

715. 

Peter.      Chris.  -  Eve,    4  :  22. 
323. 

Death    in    D.    4:194, 

386. 


Peter's-day.     R.  &  B.  3 :  150. 

474. 
Petrarch.     E.    &   B.   3:476. 

(301. 
Petrifaction.     Old  Pict.  2 :  40.     C. 

177.     70. 
Petrific.     Numph.  5 :  350.     C.  814. 

181. 
Petrus  Aponensis.     Pietro,  6:167. 

C.  .S9<t. 
Petticoats.    Two  Poets,  6 :  109.    C 

871.     126. 
Petty.     Last  R.   2:280.     C.   2G8. 
62. 

Childe   R.  2:333.     C.  288. 

236. 

R.    &    B.  3:40.      C.   430. 

208. 
Petulance.    Red  Cott.  5 :  52.     C. 

756.     283. 
Phaidra.     Artemis,  4:  61.     C.  337. 
Phanal.    Sor.  1 :  283.  _  C.  110. 
Phantom  -  crew.     Ari.  A.  5 :  178. 

C.  659. 
Phantom-like.     Red  Cott.  5:21. 

C.  744. 
Phantom-wife.     Fifine,  4:  392.    C. 

707. 
Phaps-Elaphion.     Ari.   A.  5:234. 

C.  678. 
Pheidippides.     Paech.  5 :  332.     C. 

807. 
Phene.      Pippa,   1:342.      C.   135. 

217. 
Philosophic  Sin.    R.   &  B.  3:70. 

0.  441. 
Philosophizes.    Pietro,  6 :  173.     C. 

902.     95. 
Philosophy.   Fifine,  4:432.   C.  729. 

132. 
Phoeh^.     Two   Poets,   6:104.      C. 

869. 
Phoebus.     Two  Poets,  6 :  104.     C. 

S(i9. 
Phoenix.     Inn  A.  5:251.     C.  776. 

"5- 
Phcenix-like.      Fust,   6:  379.      C. 

984. 
Phoenix'.      R.   &   B.   3:  75.      C. 

444.     18. 


Phosphoric.    La  S.  6 :  73.     C.  858. 

75- 
Phrase.     Flute-M.   6 :  424  ;   7 :  81. 

C.  1001.     37. 
Physics.     Toccata,  2 :  .36.     C.  175. 

157. 
Physicking.     Red  Cott.  5 :  57.     C. 

758. 
Piano-piece.      Inn  A.   5:272.     C. 

785. 
Pick-a-back.     R.  &B.  3::58.     C. 

429.     13. 
Picks.    Red  Cott.  5 :  27.     C.  746. 

184. 
Picker-up.      R.   &   B.   3:77.     C. 
444.     180. 
Karsh.  4:t>4.     C.  338. 


Pickle.    R.  &  B.  3:446.     C.  590. 

20. 
Pickle  -  tub  -  hoards.     Pied  Piper, 

2 :  284.     C.  269. 
Pickthauk.    R.  &  B.  3:339.     C. 

548. 
Picture.    Wanting,  6:193.    C.  911. 

85. 
Picture-pearl.     Fifine,  4:397.     C. 

710. 
Picture -side.      Fil.  Bald.  5:377. 

C.  824. 
Pictures.    Gondola,  2 :  268.    C.  264. 
240. 

Cleon,  4:  118.    C.  359.    188. 

Piddling.     Two  Poets,  6:97.     C. 

867.     214. 
Pie.     Caliban,  4:  208.     C.  392. 
Piece.     LaS.6:t)5.     C.  854.     247. 
Pieced-out.     Prince  H.  4 :  354.     C. 

691. 
Pied  Bull.     Ned   B.   6:145.     C. 

889. 
Pierian.      Two   Poets,   6:95.      C 

866.     98. 
Pietro.     R.  &B.  3:18.     C.  421. 
Pietro  Berretini.    Bea.  Sig.  6 :  412 ; 

7 :  57.     C.  996. 
Pietro  of  Cortona.    R.  &  B .  3 :  153. 

C.  475. 
Pig-of -lead-like.     Chris.-Eve,  4 :  4. 

C.  317.     244. 
Pig-perversity.    Inn  A.  5 :  282.    C 

789. 
Pignuts.     Fr.  Fu.  6:  332.     C.  966. 

II. 
PUed-up.      Crist.   2:18.      C.   169. 
no. 

R.  &B.3:93.     C.451.    81. 

R.   &  B.  3:126.      C.  464. 

283. 


439 


Pilgrim-foot 


INDEX 


Plain 


Pilf,Tini-foot.    La  S.  6:65.    C.  854. 
Pilha-like.    R.&B.3:15.    C.  420. 

97. 
Pillar -wise.      Balau.   4:309.     C. 

620. 
Pillow-luck.    Prince  H.  4:  377.    C. 

7(X). 
Pillowy.     Red  Cott.  5 :  32.    C.  748. 
Pin-poiiit.    R.  &  B.  3 :  185.    C.  488. 
199. 

R.   &  B.  3:229.     C.  50G. 

134. 

Fr.  Fii.  6 :  334.     C.  967. 

Pin-points.     Inn  A.  5:  277.    C.787. 

69. 
Pin-prick.     Lovers'  Q.  2:30.     C. 

173. 
Pin-pricks.     R.  &  B.  3:74.      C. 

443.     III. 
Pinholed.    Red  Cott.  5:2.    C.  737. 
Pincian.    R.  &  B.  3:  9.     C.   418. 

197. 
Pine-pips.      R.  &  B.   3:310.      C. 

537. 
Pine-stump.      Her.   Trag.   2 :  314. 

C.  280. 
Pine-torch.    Pippa,  1 :  357.    C.141. 
Pine -trunks.     Ivkn,   6:134.      C. 

882. 
Pinetree-top.    Pan,  6: 189.    C.909. 
Pinion-push.     Pietro,  6 :  172.      C 

901. 
Pinkish .     R .  &  B .  3 :  353.     C.  553. 

234- 
Pinners.     R.   &    B.    3:110.      C. 

458. 
Pipe-stick.      Mihrab,   6:254.      C. 

935. 
Pipy.     Red  Cott.  5:2.      C.  737. 

213. 
Pirate-park.      Balau.   4 :  265.      C. 

603. 
Piron's.     Two  Poets,   6:110.     C. 

872. 
Pisan.    R.&B.3:464.    C.  596. 
PLsgah-view.     Inn  A.  5 :  24' 

775. 
PLsmire-sage.    Ari.  A.  5:123.     C. 

638. 
PLstoja-ware.    R.«S;B.  3:411.    C. 

Pistol.    R.  &  B.  3:  283.     C.  527. 
Pistol-practice.    Red  Cott.  5:93. 

C.  771. 
Piston.     Chris. -Eve,  4:21.      C. 

323.    39. 
Pit-a-pat.     R.   &    B.  3:60.      C. 

438.     105. 


596.    5. 
17.     C. 


Pit-pat.    Balau.  4:307.     C.  619. 
Pitch.    Red  Cott.  5 :  36.     C.  750. 

161. 
Pitches.     Pietro,   6:173.     C.  902. 
^95- 
Pitcher-leaves.     Inn  A.  5 :  270.    C. 

784. 
Piteous.    Sor.  1  :  206.     C.  SO.     62. 
Pity.    Straf.  1:171.     C.  65.     288. 

Up  —  Down,  2 :  34.     C.  175. 

16. 

Last    R.    2:279.      C.   267. 

69. 

Gram.  Fun.  2 :  311.     C.  279. 

184. 

R.   &   B.   3:337.     C.  547. 

267. 

R.   &  B.  3:425.      C.  581. 

256. 

In    a  B.   4:137.      C.   366. 

233. 

Ari.  A.  5:  111.     C.  633.    4. 

Forgiv.  5 :  .365.     C.  819.     7. 

Pity-worth.     Inn  A.   5:281.      C. 

788.     281. 
Place.    Any  Wife,  2:  70.     C.  188. 
13. 

R.   &  B.  3:292.     C.   530. 

8. 

Red    Cott.    5:2.      C.   737. 

217. 

Never,     6:235.       C.     928. 

255. 
Placid-perfect.     Bea.  Sig.  6:417; 

7 :  67.     C.  998. 
Placket.      R.    &    B.   3:168.      C. 

481. 
Plackets.    Sor.  1 :  316.     C.  123. 
Plague.    R.  &  B.  3: 133.     C.  467. 

277. 
Plague-mfected.     Inn  A.   5:296. 

C.  794. 
Plague-memory.    Aii.   A.   5:108. 

C.  632. 
Plague-prodigy.    R.  &  B.  3:157. 

C.  477. 
Plague-seed.     R.  &  B.  3:47.     C. 

432.     78. 
PlagTie-sore.     Druses,  2:106.      C. 

201. 
Plague-spot.     Para.  1:41.     (7.17. 
Plague  -  stricken.      Luria,   2 :  386. 

C.  309.    26. 
Plagues.      Para.    1:43.       C.    18. 

198. 
Plain.     Para.  1 :  98.     C.  39.     278. 

King    V.   1:407.      C.   160. 

53. 


440 


Plain 


INDEX 


Plain.    R.   &   B.  3:374.     C.  5G0. 

244. 
Balau.     4:280.        C.     609. 

214. 

Inn  A.  5:246.     C.  775.    87. 

Ger.  de  L.  6:  346.     C.  971. 

259. 
Plain-song.     Chas.  A.  6 :  363.     C. 

978. 
Plaining.    Sor.  1 :  307.     C.  120. 
Plainlier.    Sor.  1 :  282.     C.  109. 
Plan.     Ber.deM.  6:299.     C.  953. 

Plan-contriving.    R.  &  B.  3:  274. 

C.  523. 
Plans.    Old  Piet.  2:39.     C.  176. 
284. 

R.   &  B.  3:257.      C.  516. 

112. 
Plane-tree.     Prince  H.  4 :  354.     C. 

691. 
Planted.     Paech.  5:329.     C.  806. 

Planting  -  place.      An.   A.   5:150. 

C.  648. 
Plara.    Sor.  1 :  258.     C.  100. 
Plash.    Childe  R.  2:  334.     C.  288. 
Plassy.     CUve,  6 :  155.     C.  893. 
Plaster  -  patch.     Prince  H.  4 :  350. 

C.  689. 
Plastered-o'er.     Fifine,  4 :  4.32.    C. 

729.     204. 
Plastic.    R.  &  B.  3: 155.     C.  476. 

161. 
Platan.    Sor.  1 :  252.     C.  98. 
Plate -mail.      Balau.   4:305.      C. 

619. 
Plates.    R.  &  B.  3:272.     C.  523. 

203. 
Platform-stage.    Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  320. 

C.  962. 
Plato.     Pan.  1:11.     C.  6.     124. 

R.»feB.  3:210.     C.  498. 

Platon.     Ari.  A.  5:174.     C  658. 
Plausiblest.     Druses,  2 :  104.      C. 


Ari.    A.    5:233. 


200._ 
Plausive. 

678. 
Plautilla  Pucci.    R.  &  B.  3:  455. 

C.  593. 
Plautus.      R.    &    B.   3:155.      C. 

476. 
Play.     Old  Piet.  2:40.     C.   177. 
70. 

Light  W.  2:278.     C.  267. 

234. 

R.    &  B.  3:116.     C.  460. 

ig6. 


Plenty 

C.  474. 
C.  548. 
C.  914. 


Play.     R.  &   B.  3:151. 
206. 

R.   &  B.  3:. 340. 

275. 

Sol.  &  B.  6:202 

117. 

Ber.  de  M.  6 :  295.     C.  952. 

180. 
Play-house.    Sib.  Schaf.  2: 11.    C. 

167.     127. 
Play-queen.     Colombe,  2 :  207.    C. 

241. 
Play-ofP.     R.    &   B.  3:365.      C. 

557.     190. 
Play-time.     R.  &  B.  3:217.      C. 

501.     131. 
Plays.     Ari.  A.  5:  240.     C.  681. 
Played.    Master  H.  2 :  93.    C.  196. 

Waring,    2:274.      C.    266. 

54- 

Joch.  6 :  213.     C.  919. 

Player-prig.      Two  Poets,   6 :  103. 

C.  869.     102. 
Playing-face.     Gondola,  2 :  267.  C. 

2()3. 
Playing-o£F.     Colombe,  2: 210.     C. 

243. 
Playings.     Red  Cott.  5:49.      C. 

755.     255. 
Plea.    R.  &  B.  3:2.33,     C.  507. 

292. 
Plead.    R.  (fe  B.  3:313.     C.  538. 

190. 
Pleased.    A  Blot,  2: 148.     C.  218. 

188. 
Pleasure.    Up  —  Down,  2  :  34.     C. 
175.     33. 

Glove,     2 :  247.        C.     256. 

132. 

R.   &   B.  3:435.      C.  585. 

103. 

Bean -St.   6:275.      C.  943. 

178. 
Pleasure-giving.     R.  &  B.  3:415. 

C.  577. 
Pleasure-house.    Cleon,  4 :  120.    C. 

360. 
Pleasure-time.    Ari.  A.  5:151.    C. 

649. 
Pleasures.       Druses,    2:  122,      G. 
207.     3. 

R.   &  B.   3:318.     C.  540. 

59. 
Plentifully  -  watered.        Protus, 


2 :  321.     C.  283. 
Plenty.     FHght,  2:293. 
55. 
441 


Plenty 


INDEX 

C.  041 


Plenty.     Ari.  A.  5:  131 

183. 
Plie.     Fust,  6:. 368.     C.  980.     284. 
Plough-taU.    Mar.  Rel.  6:118.    C. 

875. 
Ploiig-hed-up,     Ger.  de   L.  6 :  345. 

C.  !)71. 
Pluck.      Fifine,   4:  411.      C.   718. 
233. 

Pietro,  6 :  17.").     C.  903.    92. 

Plucked.      R.    &  B.    3:437.      C. 
586.     22. 

R.    &   B.  3:469.      C.  598. 

27. 
Plumb-line.    La  S.  6 :  72.     C.  857. 
Plutarch.     R.    &   B.   3:235,      C. 

508.     243. 
Pocket.     Master  H.  2 :  96.    C.  197. 

165. 
Poeket-fidl.     R.  &  B.  3:  198.     C. 

493.     95. 
Poecile.     Cleon,  4:116.     C.  359. 
Poem.     One  Word,  4 :  125.    C.  362. 

179. 
Poem-prophecy.   Two  Poets,  6 :  87. 

C.  863. 
Poet.     Para.  1 :  60.     C.  25.     92. 

R.   &  B.  3:69.       C.  441. 

179. 

Balau.  4 :  268.     C.  604.     65. 

Ari.   A.   5 :  228.       C.    976. 

154- 
Poet-flames.    Two  Poets,  6 :  82.    C. 

8(51. 
Poet-half's.    Sor.  1 :  230.     C.  89. 
Poet-kind.    Balau.  4:  270.    C.605. 

268. 
Poet-lavs.     Joch.  6 :  224.     C.  923. 

275- 
Poet-pair.     Chris.  Sm.  6 :  314.     C. 

9()0. 
Poet-part.    Sor.  1 :  231.     C.  89. 
Poet-peer.     Ari.   A.   5 :  160.      C. 

652. 
Poet-people.      Imp.   Aug.   6:426; 

7:8.5.     C.  1001. 
Poet-propped.     Imp.  Aug.  6:  424; 

7:83.     C.  1001. 
Poet-race.    Ari.  A.  5:  228.    C.676. 
Poet-sort.     Dan.  Bar.  6 :  307.     C. 

957. 
Poet-soul.     Touch,  6: 191.    C.  910. 
Poet's.    Earth's  Ln.  2 :  20.    C.  170. 
98. 

Ari.    A.   5:105.       C.   630. 

176. 

Ari.    A.  5:106.       C.  631. 

I  go. 


Polo 
Ger.  de  L.  6 :  343.     C. 


Poet's-age 

970. 
Poets.     Pan.  1 :  13.     C.  7.     244. 

Cliris.-Eve,   4 :  23.     C.  324. 

220. 
Poetized.     R.&B.3:282.    C.526. 

130. 
Poetry.     Sor.  1 :  233.     C.  90.     42, 

Sor.  1 :  244.     C.  95.     254. 

Red  Cott.  5 :  92.     C.  771. 

Point.     Pau.  1:2.     C.2.     17O. 
Point-bknk.    Inn  A.   5:304.     C. 

797. 
Points.    Trans.  4:58.    C.  336.    31. 

Death  in  D.  4 :  195.     C.  387. 

239. 
Pointel.     Sor.  1:287.     C.  112. 
Pointing-pole.    Sor.  1 :  194.    C  75. 
Poison-bag.      R.   &  B.  3:94.     C. 

4.-)l. 
Poison-bladder.    FUght,2:307.  C. 

278. 
Poison-blains.    Para.  1 :  88.    C.  36. 
Poison-drama.     Ari.  A.  5:123.    C 

(j:w.    65. 
Poison-drench.      R.    &    B.   3:  54. 

c.  4:35. 

Poison-gourd.      Job.   Agri.   4:  71. 

C.  341. 
Poison-seed.     Inn  A.   5 :  305.     C. 

798. 
Poison-speck.    RedCott.  5:  41.    C. 


— ^ — Ari.  A.  5:144.     C.  646. 
Poison-torture.      R.  &  B.  3 :  166. 

C.  480. 
Poison-tree.    A  Blot,  2 :  109.     C. 

226. 
Poison-wattles.     Sor.   1 :  280.      C. 

109. 
Poke.     R.   &  B.  3:151. 

79. 
Policy.     King  V.  1 :  412. 
265. 

Red   Cott.   5:36. 

263. 
Polished.     Ari.  A.  5:142. 


C.  474. 
C.  162. 
C.   750. 

C.645. 

C.  777. 

C.  752. 


220. 
Polisher.     Inn  A.  5 :  252. 

193- 
Politic.     Red  Cott.  5 :  43. 

180. 
Poll-clawed.    Old  Pict.  2 :  43.     C. 

178. 
Poll's-hood.  Pacch.5:321.  C.  803. 
Pollent.    R.«feB.  3:305.     C.  535. 

82. 
Polo.     Inn  A.  5 :  250.     C.  776. 
442 


Poly  carp 


INDEX 


Pouring 


Polyearp.    Sor.  1 :  201.     C.  101. 
Polyxena.      King   V.   1:370.      C. 

14.-). 
Pomander.     R.  &  B.  3  :  116.      C. 

4(30.     lOO. 
Pompilia.     R.  &  B.  3 : 6.     C.  417. 
Pompilia-tliing.      R.    &  B.   3:03. 

C.  439. 
Pompion-plant.      Caliban,   4:  207. 

C.  3!>2. 
Pompiou-twine.     Sor.  1 :  233.     C 

90. 
Ponder.     Flight,   2:304.     C.   277. 
182. 

R.  &   B.   3:302.      C.   534. 

124. 
Pont-levis.    Sib.  Sehaf .  2 :  10.     C. 

107. 
Pooh-pooh.    Ber.deM.6:296,    C. 

952. 
Pooh-poohing.    Pambo,  6 :  236.    C. 

928. 
Pool-side.      R.  &   B.    3:347.     C. 

550. 
Poor.     Straf.  1 :  153.     C.  59.     175. 

R.&B.3:70.    C.  442.    150. 

R.&B.3:S9.     C.  449.    38. 

Joch.  0 :  227.     C.  925.     54. 

Poor-priest's.     R.  &  B.  3:8.     C. 

417. 
Poor-spirited.     Soul's  Tr.   2:347. 

C.  293.     160. 
Pope.     The  Confess.  2: 15.    C.  169. 

134- 
Pope-King.    R.&B.  3:374.     C. 

561. 
Pope's.    R.&B,  3:116.     C.  460. 
228. 

Epil.  Paech.  5 :  393.    C.  829. 

Pope's-halberdier.    R.  &  B.  3 :  417. 

C.  578. 
Popping-piece.     R.   &   B.  3:283. 

C.  527. 
Poppy-flower.    R.&B. 3:  396.    C. 

570. 
Poppy-heads.    R.  &  B.  3:  54.     C. 

435.     32. 
Poppy-juice.     Pan,  6 :  188.    C.  909. 
Populous.     Ari.  A.5:240.    C.081. 

230. 
Pork.    R.  &  B.  3:282.     C.  526. 

130. 
Pork-pie.     Prince  H.   4:331.     C. 

082. 
Pork-shop.    R.  &  B.  3:401.     C. 

595. 
Pornic.     Gold  H.  4:167.     C.  377. 
Fifine,  4 :  384.     C.  702, 


Porphyria.    Porph.  2:329.    C  286. 
Porporate,     R.  &  B.   3:148.     C, 

473. 
Porridge.     Popul.  2 :  92.     C.  195. 
Person.     Sludge,  4 :  226.     C.  399. 
Port-wine.     Don.  0:  198.     C  913. 

132. 
Portent  -  watcher.      Agam,  6 :  29. 

0.841. 
Portents.      Chris.-Eve,   4 :  16.     C. 

321.     32. 
Portentousest,    R,  &  B.  3:  5.     C. 

416. 
Portico-contriver.    Sor,  1 :  285,    C. 

111. 
Portion.     Ber.  de  M.  6:295,     C. 

952.     72. 
Portly.    R.&B.  3:  50.    0.434.   96. 
Portrait.     R.  &  B,  3 :  323,     C,  542. 
75- 

R.&B. 3:  397.    C.570.    93, 

Portrait-puzzle,    Two  Poets,  6  :  88. 

C.  803. 
Porzia.     R.&B.  3:475.     C.  600. 
Pose.     Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  320.     C.  962. 

223. 
Possessor.    Soul's  Tr,  2 :  357,     C. 

297,     3. 
Possessors,     R.   &  B.   3:417,     C. 

578,     78. 
Posset-cup.     R.    &    B.   3:  49.     C. 

433. 
Possible.     Luria,  2:404.     C.  316. 

45;    ... 
Possibilities.    Bean-St.  0 :  275.    C 

943.     178. 
Post.     Sor.  1 :  196.     C.  76.     39. 
Post-house.    R.&B.  3:218.     C. 

501. 
Postern-gate.     Forgiv.  5  :  359.     C. 

817. 
Postlethwayte,  Serjeant.     Ned  B. 

6:144.     0.888. 
Pot-valiant.    Epil.   Paech.  5:392. 

C.  828. 
Potent.     St.  Mart.  5  :  354.     C.  815. 

47- 
Pother.     Sor,  1  :  227.     C.  88, 
Pottle-deep,    Epil,  Paech,  5:390. 

C.  828, 
Pouch.    Red  Cott.  5 :  12.     C.  740. 

204. 
Pouch-bill.     Caliban,  4:210.      C. 

393. 
Poured.      Soul's   Tr.   2:345.      C. 

292.     117. 
Pouring.     Luria,   2  :  371.     C.  303. 

20. 


4i3 


Pouring 


INDEX 

C.  336. 
C. 


Precipitate 


Pouring.     Trans.   4  :  58. 

io6. 
Pouring-out.     Ari.  A.  5 :  205 

(569. 
Pout.      Ari.  A.  5:113.     C.  634. 

167. 
Poverty.     R.  &  B.  3:  39.     C.  429. 

271. 
R.  &   B.   3:154.      C.  47G. 

195- 
Powder-barrel.     R.  &   B.  3:418. 

C.  57«. 
Powder -frost.      Sor.   1:326.      C. 

127. 
Powder-paint-and-patcli.      Pietro, 

6 :  173.     C.  902. 
Power.     Para.  1 :  66.     C.  27.     36. 

Para.  1 :  121.     C.  48.     142. 

Lovers'  Q.  2  :  30.     C.   173. 

256. 
Ben  Ezra,  4 :  187.     C.  384. 

182. 
Prince  H.  4  :  334.     C.  683. 

94- 

La  fS.  6 :  64.     C.  854.     185. 

Peari,    6  :  393 ;    7 :  12.       C. 

98.8.     184. 
Rev.   6 :  436 ;    7 :  104.       C. 

1005.     61. 
Rev.   6 :  4.36 ;    7 :  105.       C. 

lfX)5.     117, 
Rev.   6 :  438 ;    7 :  108.       C. 

um.    147. 
Powers.     Para.  1:53.    C22.    203. 
Practise.    Old  Pict.  2 :  40.     C.  177. 

132. 
Practise-pother.     Flute-M,  6  :  422 ; 

7 :  77.     C.  1000. 
Practiseth.     R.  &   B.  3:320.     C. 

540.     179. 
Pradier.    Prince  H.  4 :  3.35.    C.683. 
Praise.     Para.  1 :  57.     C.  24.    206. 

Para.  1 :  114,     C.  45. 

8ong,  2  :  22.     C.  171.     258. 

Luria,  2  :  385.     C.  308.     13. 

R.   &   B.   3:125.      C.  464. 

96. 

R .  &  B .  3 :  379.     C.  562. 

Pict.    Ig.   4  :  74.       C.   342. 

2gi. 
In  a   B.   4  :  136.      C.   366. 

284. 
Epil.   Dra.  P.  4:260.      C. 

413.     154. 
Prince  H.  4 :  346.     C.  688. 

284. 
Ari.  A.  5  :  131.       C.  641. 

203, 


Praise.    Two  Poets,  6 :  97.   C.  867. 
79- 

Plot-C.    6:265.      C.    939. 

251. 

Epil.  Fer.  6  :  283.     C.  946. 

19. 

Flute-M.  6  :  422  ;  7 :  77.     C. 

1000.    208. 

Rev.  6  :  438 ;    7  :  110.      C. 

1006.     192. 
Praise  -  pa jTiient.     Fifine,   4:432. 

C.  729. 
Praise-tide.    Sor.  1 :  2.30.     C.  89. 
Pranked.     Red  Cott.  5:22.      C. 

744. 
Prate.     R.   &  B.  3:151.     C.  474. 

23- 
Prate-apace.    Ned  B.  6:146.     C. 

8S9. 
Prates.     Red  Cott.  5 :  80.     C.  766. 

286. 
Pravity.      Chris.-Eve,   4:26.      C. 

325. 
Pray.    R.  &  B.  3:108.     C.  457. 

127. 
Prayed.    Pretty  W.  2 :  77.    C.  191. 
150- 

Soul's  Tr.  2:339.     C.  290. 

91. 

Xed    B.    6:143.      C.    887. 

201. 
Prayer-book's.     R.    &  B.  3:55. 

C.  443.     69. 
Prayer -time.      Ponte  A.   6:407; 

7:47.     C.  994.    95. 
Pre-appointed.      Sor.   1 :  214.      C 

83. 
R.&B.  3:111.     C.  458. 


Pre-arrange.      Prince  H.   4:376. 

C.  699. 
Pre-eminent.     Red  Cott.  5:  76.  C. 

765. 
Preach.     Red  Cott.  5 :  61.     C.  759. 

251- 
Preacher's.     Chris.-Eve,  4 :  30.    C. 

326. 
Preaching.     Chris.-Eve,   4:4.     C. 

317.     244. 
Preachment.     Ber.  de  M.  6:296. 

C.  952. 
Precaution.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  356.    C. 

297.     225. 
Preciousness.    R.&B.  3:73.     C, 

443.     9. 
Precipice-encurled.     De  Gus.  2 :45. 

C.  178. 
Precipitate.    R.&B,  3:311.     C. 

537.     164. 
444 


Predestined 


INDEX 


Priests 


Predestined.     R,  &  B.  3 :  174,     C. 

4So.     142. 
Prefect.     Druses,  2:  121.     C.  207. 
Prefect-incubus.      Druses,   2 :  103. 

C.  200. 
Prefect-sway.     Druses,  2 :  106.    C 

201. 
Preference.   Which,   C:401;7:29. 

C.  991.     147. 
Prejudice.     K.    &  B.  3:447.      C, 
540.     64. 

Red   Cott.  5:36.     C.   750. 

161. 

Pietro,     6:175.       C.     903. 

187. 
Prelude.     La  S.  6:  65.     C.  854. 
Prelude-Battle.      Ari.   A.   5:230. 

C.  677. 
Prelusive.    R.&B.3:21.    C.423. 
..46. 
Premature.      Italian,    2:256.      C. 

259.     16. 
'Prentice-hand.     Inn  A.  5:248.  C. 

775.     108. 
Prerogative.     R.  &  B.  3:  471.     C. 
599.     262. 

Fust,  6 :  381.     C.  985.     127. 

Presagefully.    Colombe,  2 :  204.    C. 

240.     104. 
Presence.     Para.  1 :  118.      C.  47. 
152. 

Lost    L.     2:3.       C.    164. 

ig8. 

R.   &  B.  3:226.     C.  504. 

79. 
Presence-chamber.    Straf .   1 :  155. 


R.  &  B.  3:217. 
C. 


C.  59. 
Presence -hall, 

C.  500. 
Present.      Childe  R.   2:333. 

2.S8.     18. 
Chris.-Eve,  4:17.     C.   322. 

175- 
Ari.     A.     5:99.       C.    628. 

51. 

Pillar,  6 :  268.     C.  941.     64. 

Ger.  de  L.  6:  351.     C.  973. 

88 
Preserve.    " Soul's  Tr.  2 :  342.     C. 

291.    86. 
Presume.      Para.    1:34.      C.   15. 

30. 
Pretence.     R.    &   B.   3:458.      C. 

594.    269. 
In    a    B.   4:i;56.      C.   366. 

149. 
Geo.  B.  D.  6:  321.     C.  962. 

67. 


Pretension.    Colombe,  2 :  226.     C. 

249.     104. 
Lm    A.    5:310.      C.    800. 

246. 
Pretentious.    R.  &  B.  3:44.     C. 

431.     191. 
R.   &  B.  3:429.      C.  583. 

83. 
Pretermit.    Ponte  A.  6 :  409 ;  7 :  51. 

C.  995. 
Prevents.     R.   &   B.   3:337.      C. 

547.     224. 
Prey.     Pan.  1 :  16.     C.  8.     102. 
Priam.      Dev.   6:428;   7:89.      C. 

1002. 
Price.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  337.     C.  289. 

177. 
R.   &    B.    3:45.      C.  432. 

224. 
Pride.     By   Fire.   2:64.      C.   186. 

104. 
Any  Wife,  2:70.     C.  188. 

260. 
Last    R.    2:279.      C.   267. 

69. 
Gram.  Fun.  2 :  311.     C.  279. 

284. 
Childe  R.  2:330.     C.  287. 

62. 
R.   &    B.   3:77.      C.  444. 

226. 

J.  Lee,  4 :  159.     C.  375.  67. 

Pope   &   N.   6:402;    7:33. 

0.1)92.     112. 
Pried.     Cliris.-Eve,  4:23.     C.  324. 

220. 
Priest.    R.  &  B.  3:184.     C.  487. 

128. 

R.   &  B.  3:199.     C.  493. 

191. 
R.  &   B.  3:224.     C,  503. 

210. 
R.   &   B.  3:255.      C.   516. 

215. 
Priest-confederate.    R.  &  B.  3 :  41. 

C.  430. 
Priest-gallant.    R.  <$:  B.  3 :  m.     C. 

440. 
Priests.     The   Confess.  2 :  15.     C. 

i(!;».   134- 

R.   &   B.    3:54.      C.  435. 

116. 
R.   &    B.   3:87.      C.  448. 

144. 
R.   it  B.  3:117.      C.  4<>0. 

256. 
R.   &  B.   3:188.     C.  489. 

278. 


445 


Priests  INDEX 

Priests.    R.  &  B.  3:  366.      C.  557. 

i68. 
Red   Cott.   5:61.      C.   759. 

251- 
Priest's-duty.      R.    &    B.  3:  l'J2. 

C.  491. 
Priest's  -  exemption.      R.     &    B. 

3:366.     C.557. 
Priestlings.    R.  &  B.  3:401.     C. 

572. 
Primacy.      R.   &   B.   3:146.      C. 

472. 
Primatice.       Crist.     6:205.        C. 

915. 
Prime.       Sor.     1:221.       C.      85. 

14- 

R.  &B.  3:1.     C.  415. 

Prime  -  begetters.      Agam.   6 :  50. 

C.  848. 
Primrose-buds.     Red   Cott.   5 :  35. 

C.  749. 
Primrose-patch.    R.    &  B.   3:60. 
C.  438.     177. 

R.  &  B.  3:  425.     C.  581. 

Primrose-root.     Red   Cott.   5 :  35. 

C.  749. 
Prince.     Para.  1:46.     0.19.     16. 
R.   &  B.   3:155.      C.  476. 

Prince  o'  the  Power  of  the  Air. 

R.  &B.  3:13.     C.  419. 
Prineelier.      Druses,    2 :  130.       C. 

211. 
Princeliest.      Druses,  2:130.      C. 

211. 
Princess-like.    J.  Lee,  4:162.     C. 

376. 
Principle.     Fifine,  4:  439.     C.  733. 

263. 
Principles.     Soul's  Tr.  2 :  354.     C. 

296.     108. 
Print.     R.    &   B.   3:28.     C.   425. 

256. 
R.   &  B.  3:271.      C.  522. 

275. 
R.   &  B.   3:320.     C.  540. 

64. 

— ^ Ivkn,  6:137.     C._884.     187. 

Prison  -  bars.      Bea.   Sig.    6:419; 

7:71.     C.  999.     253. 
Prison-breaker.     Straf .  1 :  186.    C. 

72. 
Prison -floor.     Straf.   1:183.      C. 

70. 
Prison-gate.     R.  &  B.  3:30.     C. 

42(i. 
Prison-house.      Red   Cott.   5:11. 

C.  470. 


Probity 

Prison-like.    R.  &  B.  3:62.     C. 

438.     279. 
Prison-straw.     R.  &  B.  3 :  285,    C. 

527. 
PrivUege.    R.&B.3:41.     0.430. 

18. 
R.   &  B.  3:443,      C.  588. 

201. 
Prize.      Luria,    2:368.       C.    301. 

282. 
R.   &    B.  3:80.      C.  445. 

151. 
R.  &  B.  3:355.      C.   553. 

262. 
R.    &   B.   3:472.      C.  599. 

192. 
An.    A.    5:120.      C.    636. 

284. 
Inn    A.    5:284.       C.    789. 

250. 
Two  Poets,  6 :  115.     C.  874. 

190. 
Pietro,     6 :  180.       C.     905. 

34- 
Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  321.     C.  962. 

157- 
Prize-flower.     Iim  A.  5 :  274.     C. 

785.     15. 
Prize-lawful.    Red  Cott.  5 :  35.   C. 

749. 
Prize -lawless.     Red  Cott.   5:35. 

C.  749. 
Prize-portent.    Inn  A.  5 :  302.     C. 

796. 
Prized.      Cleon,   4:122.      C.  361. 

241. 
Prizers.     Sor.  1 :  288.     C.  112. 
Probation.    R.    &   B.  3:174.     C. 
483.     60. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  365.     C.  557. 

R.   &  B.   3 :  388.      C.   566. 

137. 

J.    Lee,    4:160.      C.    375. 

138. 
Probation-place.    La  S.  6:71.     C. 

857.     60. 
Probatively.    R.  &  B.  3:  387.     C. 

566. 
Probes.      Bishop    B.   4:105.      C. 

354.     56. 
Probed.    R.  &  B.  3:8.     C.  417. 
128. 

Ixion,      6:209.       C.     917. 

205. 
Probing.    R.  &  B.  3  :  362.     C.  556. 


Probity.     R.  &  B.  3 :  367.     C.  558. 
74. 
446 


Proceed 


INDEX 


Proudhon 


Proceed.     Para.  1 :  47.    C.  20.   34. 
Proeurati^  -  sides.     Fifine,  4  :  42ti. 

C.  72(j. 
Prodii,^^.     A  Blot,  2 :  154.     C.  221. 

277. 
Product.     Fifine,  4:417.     C.  721. 

103. 
Proeraium.     R.   &   B.  3:57.      C. 

4;5(j. 

Profession.     R.  &  B.  3 :  447.     C. 

591).     64. 
Professions.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  3.52.    C. 

2!)5.     123. 
Professor.     Chris.-Eve,  4:  19.     C. 

322. 
Professors.     R.  &   B.  3 :  417.     C. 

578.     78. 
Profit.    R.  &  B.  3 :  280.     C.  520. 
284. 

Eas.-Day,   4:52,      C.   334. 

127. 

Red   Cott.   5:48.      C.   754. 

190. 

Two  Poets,  6 :  84.     C.  8G1. 

t88 
Profit-bearing.    R.   &   B,   3:415. 

C.  577. 
Profitless.      Para.   1:39.      C.    17. 
273. 

Andrea,  4:85.  C.  346.   273. 

Profound.     Englishm.  2:260.     C- 


261. 


c. 


Profusion.    Red  Cott.  5:18, 

743.     6. 
Progress.     Fr.  Fu.  6 :  3.38.     C.  969. 

126. 
Project.      Ben  Ezra,   4:186.      C. 

384.     21. 
Prolixly.     Karsh.  4 :  70.     C.  340. 
Prologuize.    Old  Pict.   2:44.     C. 

178. 
Prominently.    Red  Cott.  5:2.     C. 

737.     233. 
Promise.    Sor.  1 :  253.    C.98.    212. 

Saul,  2 :  50.     C.  181 .     22. 

Luria,2:372,    C.303.    193. 

Ari.    A.   5:232.       C,   678. 

"5- 
Promise-breakers.     Ari.  A.  5 :  236. 

C.  ()79. 
Promise-streak.     R.  &  B.  3:294. 

C.  531.     163. 
Promised.      A   Blot,   2 :  156.      C. 

221.     46. 

R.  &B.  3:91.  C.450.    172. 

Prompt.     King  C.  1 :  403.     C.  159. 

209. 
R.&B.  3:368.     C.  558. 


Prompt.    R.  &  B.  3: 417.     C.  578. 

26b. 
Prompted.     U.  &  B.  3:417.      C. 

.578.     213. 
Prompter's.     Red  Cott.  5 :  .36.     C. 

750.     121. 
Promptlier.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  347.    C. 

293. 
Promptuary.    Sor.  1 :  294.     C.  114. 
Proof.     Para.  1 :  31.     C.  14.     92. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  92.       C.  4.50. 

220. 
Proof-mark.     Pippa,    1 :  .334.      C. 

131. 
Proof-positive.    Forgiv.  5 :  ;363.    C, 

818. 
Proofs.    Sor.  1:296.    C.  11.5.    158. 
Prop.     R.  &   B.   3:401.     C.  571. 

229. 
Prop-work.      Druses,   2 :  114.      C. 

204. 
Prophecy.     Prince  H.  4:  331.     C. 

682.     51. 
Prophesy.      Red   Cott.   5:51.     C. 

75().     180. 
Prophet.      Red  Cott.   5 :  18.      C. 

743.     44. 
Prophet-play.     Agam.   6 :  29.      C. 

841. 
Prophet-song.     Two  Poets,  6 :  88. 

C.  8(13. 
Prophet-winds.      Saul,    2:54.     C. 

182. 
Prophet's.    Pietro,  6: 168.    C.  899. 

183. 
Proportionably.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  355. 

C.  297.     95. 
Propping-tree.     FUglit,  2 :  303.    C. 

276. 
Prore.     Ari.   A.   5 :  104.     C.  630. 

Prose.'    R.   &  B.  3:168.     C.  481. 

189. 
Prose -folk.      Fifine,   4:422.      C 

724.     189. 
Prose-poet.     Waring,   2 :  270.     C. 

264. 
Protest.     Ari.  A.  5:130.     C.  641. 
177. 

La  S.  6 :  57.     C.  851.     170. 

Protoplasm.       Two  Poets,   6:  74. 

C.  8(;().     22. 
Protoplast.    Sor.  1 :  296.     C.  115. 
Protruded.     R.   &  B.    3:15.     C. 

420.     78. 
Protus.     Cleon,  4:115.     C.  358. 
Proudhon.     Prince  H.  4 :  348.     C. 

689. 


147 


Proudly-purposed 


INDEX 


Proudly-purposed.     R.  &  B.  3:2. 

C.  415.     249. 
Prove.     Para.  1:40.     C.  17.     231. 

R.  &B.;5:28!).    C.52n.    41. 

La  S.  0 :  ()4.     C.  853.     138. 

Fr.    Fu.   (J :  339,       C.  tKi'J. 

288. 
Proved.     Glove,   2:250.     C.  257. 

50- 

Ben  Ezra,  4 :  188.     C.  384. 

88 
Proveud.    Pietro,  6 :  170.     C.  900. 

247. 
Prover.     Chris.-Eve,  4:6.     C.  318. 

262. 
Proverb  -  pokes.      Ari.  A.  5:  122. 

C.  637. 
Provide.      Ben  Ezra,    4:186.      C. 

384.     203. 
Providence.    R.  &  B.  3:39.     C. 
429.     27. 

La  S.  6 :  61.     C.  852.     109. 

Prudence.     Saul,   2:52.     C.   181. 
40. 

Luria,2:362.    C.299.    292. 

Pruuing-hook.    R.    &  B.    3:437. 

C.  586.     6. 
Pruriency.      Red   Cott.   5:9.     C. 

739. 
Psalm.    Para.  1:58.     C.  24.    206. 
Psaltress.      Para.   1 :  117.     C.   46. 

237- 
Published.    R.  &  B.  3:146.     C. 

472.     252. 
Pucci.     R.&B.  3:455.     C.  593. 
Puccio.     Luria,  2 :  362.     C.  299. 
Pudency.     R.   &   B.   3:170.      C. 

482. 
Pulcinello-trumpet.     Up  —  Down, 

2  :  33.     C.  174. 
Pulled-up.    Ned  B.  6:146.   C.889. 

255. 
Pullet-egg.    Red  Cott.  5 :  43.     C. 

752.     52. 
Pulling.      Soul's  Tr.   2:356.      C. 

297.     65. 
Pullulate.     Chris.  Sm.  6  :  317.     C. 

961.     242. 
PuUy-hauly.      Fil.   Bald.  5  :  381. 

C.  825. 
Pulpit-corner.      R.   &   B.   3:436. 

C.  585.     50. 
Pulpit-place.      Fra  Lippo,   4  :  81. 

C.  345. 
Pulpiteer.      Fr.   Fu.   6  :  334.      C. 

967. 
Pulpy-prime.    Balau.   4:303.     C. 

618. 


Purposes 
Old  Pict.  2:38.     C. 


Pulse-tick 

176. 
Pulseless.    R.&B.  3:  211.    C.498. 

85. 
Pun-pelleted.     Ari.  A.  5 :  110.     C. 

632. 
Punctual.    Ponte  A.  6 :  407 ;  7 :  47. 

C.  it<)4.    95. 
Punished.    Ldon,  6  :  209.     C.  917, 

154. 
Pmiishment.     R .  &  B .  3 :  415.     C. 

577.     205. 
Red   Cott.   5:72.      C.  763. 

94. 

Iv,\n,  6  :  140.     C.  886.     276. 

Camel-D.   6 :  260.      C.  937. 

107. 
Punk.     Fust,  6:371.     C.  981. 
Puny.     R.  &  B.   3:333.     C.  545, 

212, 
Puppet -champions.     Two  Poets, 

6 :  91.     C.  864. 
Puppets.    Sor.  1 :  195.  C  75.    104. 

Pippa,  1:331.    C.  130.    285. 

Pippa,  1:367.     C.  145.     92. 


Purchase-money.    Druses,  2  :  124. 

C.  208. 
Pure.    Which,  6 :  401 ;  7 :  28.     C. 

991.    50. 
Purfle.    Sor.  1 :  213.     C.  83. 
Purged.    R.  &  B.  3 :  222.     C.  503. 

236. 
Ponte  A.  6 :  411 ;  7 :  55.     C. 

996.     52. 
Purging-fire.    Sor.  1:314.     C.122. 
Purify.    R.  &  B.  3:65.     C.  440. 

37- 
Purifies.      Colombe,   2  :  228.      C. 

250.     144. 
Purity.     Pippa,    1:339.      C.   133. 
18. 

Druses,  2 :  142.    C.215.    90. 

Red   Cott.   5:36.      C.  750. 

161. 
Purloin.    Fr.  Fu.  6 :  333.     C.  966. 

45- 
Purple-strewn.    Agam.  6  :  27.     C. 

840. 
Purpling.     Chris.  Sm.  6:316.     C. 

960.     190. 
Purpose.     Fifine,  4 :  427.     C.  727. 

71- 
Mihrab,   6  :  256,       C.  936, 

178. 
Ber.  de  M.  6:  298.     C.  953. 

82. 
Purposes.     R.   &   B.  3:368.      C. 
558. 


448 


Purse 


INDEX 


Quiddit 


Purse.     Holy-C.   2:318.     C.   2S2. 

41- 
R.   &   B.  3  :  92.      C.  450. 

220. 

R.&  3.3:113.    C.4o9.    15. 

Purse-controlling.  Red  Cott.  5 :  39. 

C.  751. 
Pursed-up.    R.   &  B.  3:429.     C. 

5S2.     167. 
Pursuit.     Para.  1:30.     C.  13.     i.* 
Purtenance.    R.&B.  3:144.     C. 

471. 
Purveyors.      Sor.    1 :  195.     C.   75. 

49. 
Push.    R.  &  B.  3:465.     C.  596. 
176. 

Red  Cott.  5:4.      C.   737. 

254. 
Pushed.    R.  &  B.  3:  69.     C.  441. 
87. 

R.    &   B.   3:100.     C.   454. 

117. 

R.    &    B.  3:360.     C.  555. 

287. 
Pnshing-by.    Sor.   1:196.     C.   76. 

39- 
Pustules.    R.&B.  3:  229.    C.  506. 
Putative.      R.    &   B.   3:  18.      C. 

422. 
Putridity.    La  S.  6 :  73.     C.  858. 

75. 
Putter.     Para.  1 :  92.     C.  37. 
Puzzled.    Red  Cott.  5:5.     C.  738. 

75- 
Puzzled-more.     R.  &  B.  3:110. 

C.  458.     172. 
Pym.    Straf .  1 :  133.     C.  51. 

Straf.  1 :  141.     C.  54. 

Chas.   A,  6:364.      C.  978. 

266. 
Pyropus-stone.      Sor.   1 :  316.      C. 


123. 
Python.     Two  Poets,  6 :  l(tt. 

869. 
Pythoness.    R.  &  B.  3:132. 

466. 


Quack-nonsense.  Bishop  B.  4 :  102. 

C.  353. 
Quack-priest.     Ari.  A.  5 :  101.     C. 

629. 
Quail-nets.    Englishm.  2 :  257.     C. 

260. 
Quality.    R.  &  B.  3:  21.     C.  423. 

229. 


Quarry  -  overtaking.      Red    Cott. 

5 :  10.     C.  740. 
Qu.-irter-emperors.    Protus,  2 :  320. 

C.  283. 
Quarter-fowl.     R.   &   B.  3:114. 

C.  459. 
Quarter -staff.     R.   &   B.  3:123. 

C.  463. 
Quarter-year.     Joch.   6:219.      C. 

921. 
Quartet-score.     Fifine,  4:434.     C. 

7:50.     169. 
Queasily,     Flight,  2 :  297.     C.  274. 

245. 
Queasy.    R.  &  B.  3:  358.     C.  555. 

122. 
Queen.     Miseon.   2 :  73.      C.   189. 


In 


4  :  131.     C.  364. 
Queen-bride.     Druses,  2:101.     C. 

199. 
Queen's.      Sor.     1:213.       C.    82. 
149. 

Prince  H.  4:350.     C.  689. 

249. 
Queen's-day.    Count  G.  2 :  235.    C. 

253. 
Quenched.    R.    &  B.  3:256.     C. 
516.     94. 

Ned  B.  6 :  146.     C.  889.  33. 

Question.     R.   &  B.  3:364,      C. 
557,     123. 

Ari.    A.    5:177.      C.    659. 

.72. 
Question-torture.  Cenciaia,  5:  372, 

C.  822. 
Quioherat.      Fr.   Fu.   6:341.      C, 

970. 
Quick.      Balau.  4:. 311.      C.   621. 

35- 
Quick-eyed.     Druses,   2 :  122.      C. 

207. 
Quick-hushed.     Imp.  Aug.  6 :  427 ; 

7 :  87.     C.  1002. 
Quick -receptive.     Touch,  6:191. 

C.  910. 
Quick-turned.    Stat.  &  B.  2 :  327. 

C.  285. 
Quickens.     R.  &  B.  3:402.      C. 

.572.     272. 
Quickened.      Fifine,    4:401.      C. 
712.     233. 

Mary  W.   6:206.     C.   916. 

199. 
Quickliest.    Chris.-Eve,  4 :  3.     C. 


Quiddit. 
177. 

449 


Old    Pict.    2:41.       C. 


Quiet 


INDEX 
C.  374 


Qiiiot.     J.   Lee,  4 :  15G. 

288. 
Quiet-colored.      Love,   2 :  25,      C. 

171.     66. 
Quieted.    Ari.  A.  5  :  100.     C.  629. 

242. 
Quietus.     Ber.  de  M.  0:207.     C. 

05:^.     288. 
Quill -craft.      Fust,    0:37.-),      C. 

OS.-?. 
Quill-driving,     Clive,  0:150.      C. 

«<)4. 
Quilp-Hoi)-o'-my-thurab.      Pacch, 

.5 :  330.     C.  807._ 
Quince.      Fra    Lippo,   4 :  75,      C. 
.342. 

Prol.   Fer.  0:239,     C.  929, 

19. 
Quince-tinet.     Flight,  2 :  290,      C. 


Straf,  1:185.      C. 

Numph.    5:349. 

C. 

c. 


274 
Quince  -  tree. 

71. 
Quintessential 

C.  813. 
Quit  -  rent.      Pacch.    5 :  3.30. 

807. 
Quitch,     Death  in  D.  4:192 

:«o. 

Quite-qnenched.     R.  &  B,  3:17. 

C.  421, 
Quixote -mage.      J.    Lee,   4:157, 

C.  374. 


R 

Rabbi.     Doctor,  0 :  188.     C.  909. 

Joch.  6 :  212.     C,  918.  _ 

Rabble  -  government.       Ari.    A. 

5:131.     C.  641. 
Rabble-rout.    Ned  B.  6:149.     C. 

891. 

Geo.  B.  D.  0 :  .321.     C.  902. 

Rabble-rule.     Ari.  A.  5: 142,     C. 

045. 
Ral)ble's-brabble,     R.  &  B.  3 :  100. 

C.  450.     12. 
Race.     Para.  1 :  44.     C.  19.     90. 
Ari.    A,    5:155,      C.    650. 

2og. 
Two  Poets,  6:  81,     C.  860, 

no. 
Bean -St.  6:281,      C.  946, 

197- 
Race-ground.    Ber.  de  M.  6:296, 

C.  952.     96. 
Kaeehorse-sired.     Ari.  A.   5 :  155. 

C.  650, 


Rampart 
&    B,    3:172.      C. 


Rachel,     R. 

482. 
Rack-and-cord-contrivance.    R.  & 

B.  3:442.     C.  .588. 
Radetzky's.    Old  Pict.  2 :  44,     C. 

178. 
Rafael,     One  Word,   4:124,      C. 

362.     230. 
Fr.    Fu.    0:331.      C.    960. 


42. 
Rag.     R.   &  B.   3:193,     C.  491. 
^32. 
Rag-and-feather.     Inn   A.   5 :  294. 

C.  794.     108. 
Rags.    R.   &  B.  3:304.     C.  557. 

235. 
Chris.-Eve,  4:. 30,     C,  320. 

211. 
Red  Cott.   5:4.      C.    738. 

201. 
Ragamuffin  -  saint.      Bishop    B, 

4  :  108.     C.  .355. 
Ragbags.    Ari.  A.  5 :  122,     C.  0.37. 


231. 
Rage.    R.  &  B 
no. 

R.   &  B.  3:424, 

205. 
Raghib,        Druses,     2 :  103. 


3:  140.     C.  470. 

C.  581, 

C. 

Red  Cott.   5:9. 

Red  Cott.   5:16. 


200. 
Rahab  -  thread. 

C.  739. 
Railed  -  about. 

C.  742. 
Rain-drippings.    Sib.  Schaf .  2 :  10. 

C.  167. 
Rain  -  resounding.      Agam,  6:21. 

C  838 
Rainbow,      Sor.  1:297.      C.   110. 

139. 
Rainbow-birth.     Ger.  de  L.  0 :  345. 

C.  971.    75. 
Rainbow-edged.    Sor,  1:208.     C. 

80. 
Rainbow  -  substance.     Chris.   Sm, 

0  :  313.     C.  959.     24. 
Rainbow-vapor.    Sor.  1 :  210.      C. 

84. 
Rainbows.    Joch.  6  :  225.     C.  924, 

88 
Raise.     Pau.  1:25.     C.  11.     283. 

Fifine,    4:415,       C.     719, 

114. 
Raised.     R,  &  B,  3:  423.     C.  580. 

126. 
Raisin-eluster.     R.   &  B.  3:328. 

C.  543. 
Rampart.    Para.  1 :  41.     C.  18. 


450 


Rampart 


INDEX 


Rampart.    R.  &B.  3:43.    C.  4.31. 

249. 
Ramparted.     Chris. -Eve,  4 :  't.    C. 

31 S. 
Ramped.      Ari.    A.    5 :  143.       C. 

()45. 
Rampired.     Red  Cott.  5:32,     C. 

748. 
Rank.     Dan.  Bar.  6  :  306.     C.  956. 

171. 
Rankle.      Camel -D.   6:259.      C. 

937.     280. 
Rankles.      R.    &   B.   3:140.      C. 

470.     289. 
Rankh- -salted.     R.   &  B.  3:77. 

C.  444. 
Ransacked.      Evelyn,    2:24.      C. 

171.     141. 
Rap-and-rending,    R.  &  B.  3:10. 

C.  418.     86. 
Raphael.     R.   &  B.  3:217.      C. 

501.     193. 
Rapid-flowing.     Agam.  6 :  48.     C 

847. 
Rapier  -  edge.      Numph.      5 :  350. 

C.  814.     264. 
Rapier  -  fence.      R.   &   B.   3:414, 

C.  577. 
Rapscallion.    R.  &  B.  3 :  154.     C. 

475. 
Rapt.      R.     &     B,    3:210,       C. 

498. 
Rapture.     Pau.  1 :  15.*     176. 

Crist.  2 :  19.     C,  170.     126. 

Home-T.  A,  2 :  46.     C.  179. 

253. 

Pict.  Ig.  4 :  73.     C,  341. 

Epil.   Dra.   P.  4:260.      C. 

41.3.     154. 

Forgiv.    5:361.       C.     818. 

12. 
Raree  -  show.      Chris.-Eve,   4 :  29. 

C.  326. 
Rarely-qualified.     Ari.  A.  5  :  233, 

C.  678. 
Rarish.     Inn  A.  5 :  274.     C.  785. 
Rash.     Colombe,  2:209.     C.  242. 
74. 

R.  &   B.   3:233.     C.  507. 

3. 

Mul6y.     6:165.       C.     898. 

21. 
Rasp-tooth.    R,  &  B,  3 :  143,     C, 

471. 
Rat-holes.    R.  &  B.  3:284.     C. 

627.     186. 
Rat-land.    Pied  Piper,  2 :  284.     C. 

269. 


Re-embosomed 
Ma.9ter  H.  2:96. 
C.   444. 


Rat  -  riddled 

C.  197. 
Rat's.     R.   &   B.   3:77 

226. 
Rathe.     Rev.  6:439;    7:110.     C. 

l(:0(i.    288. 
Rathe-ripe.     Sor.  1  :  2.32.     C.  90. 
Rating  -  place.      Colombe,   2  :  185. 

C.  233. 
Ratiocinative,      R.  &    B.  3:340. 

C.  548.     25. 
Rational.     R.   &  B.  3:399.      C. 

570.     113. 
Ratisbon.      Incident,   2:231.      C. 

251. 
Raunce.    Sor,  1 :  324.     C.  126, 
Raw.      Ari.   A.   5:121.      C,  637. 

189. 
Raw-flesh.      Ari.   A.   5:112.      C. 

633. 
Raw-flesh-feeding.     Agam.  6 :  25. 

C.  839. 
Raw-silk-colored.     Pippa,    1:365. 

C.  144. 
Ray.     R.    &   B.   3:15.      C.   420, 
78. 

Ari.    A.    5:116.      C.    635. 

274. 
Ray-like.     Rudel,  4:123,     C.  361. 
Ray-shot.    Joch.   6:215.     C.  920. 

166. 
Razor-edge.    Red  Cott.  5:5.     C. 

738.     14. 
Razzi.     Pacch.  5 :  318.     C.  802. 
Re-absorbed.     Clive,   6 :  163.      C. 

897. 
Re-adapt.    Soul's  Tr.  2:  351.     C. 

295.     196. 
Re-assert.    R.   &  B.  3:396.     C. 

569. 
Re-bathed.     Red  Cott.  5  :  GO.     C. 

759. 
Re-coin.      Any   Wife,   2:70.      C. 

188. 
Re-counsel.     R.  &  B.  3:349.     C. 

551.     206. 
Re-creating.     R.  &  B.  3:  398.     C. 

570.     157. 
Re-distribute.      Chas.   A.   6:358. 

C.  976.     II. 
Re-echoed.    R.  &  B.  3:469.     C. 

598.     44. 
Re-echoing.     R.&B.  3:460.     C. 

594. 
Re-edits.      Red   Cott.  5:81.      C. 

767. 
Re-embosomed.    La  S.  6:58.     C. 

851. 


451 


Re-embrace 


Re-embrace.     In  a  Y.  2:82 
l!t2.     225. 

R.  &B.3:454.     C.  593. 

Re-embraced.    Two  Poets,  6 :  105. 

C.  870. 
Re-enact.      Ari.   A.   5:103.      C. 

6;50. 
Re-encompassed.     R.  &  B.  3: 177. 

C.  485. 
Re-engage.    R.  &  B.  3:134.     C. 

468. 
Re-entry.     Red   Cott.   5:31.      C. 

748. 
Re-fashioned.     Ixion,  6:208.      C. 

916.     103. 
Re-finger.     Red  Cott.  5:41.     C. 

752. 
Re-form.    Fifine,  4:  422.     C.  724. 
Re -framed.      Ixion,   6:208.      C. 

916.     103. 
Re-hauled.     Ari.   A.  5:173.     C. 

f)57. 
Re-infuse.    Chas.   A.  6 :  360.      C. 

977. 
Re-insisted.    Ari.   A.  5:128.     C. 

640. 
Re-integrate.    R.  &B.3:473.     C. 

600. 
Re-kindle.     A  Blot,  2:146.      C. 

217. 
Re -made.     R.  &  B.   3:59.      C. 

437. 
Re  -  nicknamed.      R.    &   B.   3:8. 

C.  417.     164. 
Re  -  ordinating.      Ari.   A.    5  :  177. 

C.  659. 
Re -peruse.      Fifine,    4:400.      C. 

711. 
Re-prove.    Death  in  D.  4 :  202.    C. 

390. 
Re-repeats.    Joch.6:217.     C.  921. 
Re-sing.    Ari.  A.  5:  111.     C.  633. 
Re-swathed.    Ari.  A.  5 :  127.     C. 

639. 
Re -teaches.      Luria,   2:402.      C. 

315.     136. 
Re-tell.    Red  Cott.  5:40.     C.  751. 
Re-tuikered.    R.&B.  3:412.     C. 

576. 
Re-track.    Sor.  1 :  296.     C.  115. 
Re-trim.    R.  »feB.  3:(30.     C.  438. 
Re-uttered.    Old  Pict.  2:39.     C. 

176.     99. 
Re-venders.    R.&B.  3:  2.    C.415. 
Re-wage.     Prince   H.   4 :  368.     C. 

60(5. 
Re-writes.     R.  &  B.  3:271.     C. 
522. 


INDEX 
C. 


Record 


Re-wrought.     Sor.  1 :  228.     C.  88. 
Reach.     Andrea,   4:85.     C.   346. 

97- 
Death  mD.  4: 198.     C.  388. 

291. 

Caliban,  4 :  210.  C.  393.   78. 

Reph.   6:4:54;    7:100.      C. 

1004.     II. 
Read.    R.&B.  3:263.     C.  519. 

189. 
R.    &  B.   3:3.38.      C.  547. 

267. 
Reads.    Dis  Al.  4:174.     C.  379. 

266. 
Ready-made.    Sor.  1 :  232.     C.  90. 

Sludge,  4 :  238.  C.404.   134. 

Real.    R.  &  B.  3:244.     C.  511. 

135. 
Flute-M.  6 :  424  ;  7 :  80.     C. 

1001.     8. 
Realities.    A  Blot,  2: 167.     C.226. 

218. 
Realize.    Bishop  B.  4:  93.    C.  350. 

114. 
Reaped.     Druses,  2 :  107.     C.  201. 

74- 
Rear-mice.     Para.  1:70.     C.  29. 
Reason.     Pau.  1 :  17.     C.  8.     123. 

King  V.   1 :  383.      C.   151. 

174. 

R.  &  B.  3:386.      C.   565. 

148. 

Trans.  4:57.     C.  335.     155- 

AbtV.4:185.    C.  383.    169. 

La  S.  6:  66.     C.  854.     192. 

Reason-check.      R.   &   B.   3:292. 

C.  530.     50. 
Reate.    Sor.  1 :  315.     (7.123. 
Rebel.    R.&B.  3 :  183.     C.  487. 

12. 
Rebellion.    R.  &  B.  3:329.     C. 
544.    266. 

Fifine,  4:  396.    C.  709.   200. 

Rebuff.      Ben  Ezra,   4 :  186.      C. 

3.S4.     276. 
Rebuke.     R.  &  B.  3 :  297.     C.  532. 

Recall.    Colombe,  2:193.     C.  236. 

182. 
Receive.    Saul,  2: 57.    C.184.    92. 
Recency.     Pacch.  5:323.     C.  804. 

62. 
Recompense.      Straf.   1:179.      C 

69.     88. 
Record.       Para.    1:120.       C.   47. 
181. 

Stat.  &  B.  2:  327.     C.  285. 

291. 


452 


Records 


INDEX 


Remaina 


Records.     R.  &  B.  3:  10.     C.  418. 

86. 
Recrudescence.     Red   Cott.  5 :  65. 

C.  7G1. 
Recrudescency.      R.   &  B.  3:14. 

C.  41!t.     103. 
Rectitude.      R.&B.  3:162.     C. 

478.     156. 
Red.    Evelyn,  2:24.     C.  171. 
R.   &  B.  3:353.    C.  553. 


234- 
Gold  H.  4:165. 
276. 


C.   377. 

a 

c. 


Red-cheeked.    R.&B.  3:  346. 

5.50. 
Red-clothed.    R.  &  B.  3 :  54. 

435.     32. 
Red-cotton-Night-cap-wise.       Red 

Cott.  5 :  97.     C.  773. 
Red -cross.      Druses,  2:123,      C. 

208. 
Red-crossed.     R.  &  B.  3 :  422.     C. 

580. 
Red-eyed.    R.   &  B.  3:284.     C. 

527. 
Red-fig-wise.     Ari.  A.  5:114.     C. 

634. 
Red-handed.     M.-m.  Meg,  6 :  404 ; 

7:40.     C.  993. 
Red-hot.      R.   &  B.  3:373.      C. 

5(i().     107. 
Red-letters.     R.  &  B.  3 :  82.     C. 

446. 
Red-lettered.    Red  Cott.  5 :  23.    C. 

745. 
Red-ripe.     R.  &  B.  3 :  32.     C.  427. 
112. 

Ai-i.  A.  5 :  103.     C.  630. 

Red-roofed.     Inn  A.   5:244.     C. 

774. 
Red-rusted.     De  Gus.  2:45.     C. 

178. 
Red-socked.    R.  &  B.  3 :  382.     C. 

564. 
Red-stockinged.     R.  &  B.  3:148. 

C.  473. 
Red-written.     Balau.  4  :  305.     C. 

618. 
Redden.    R.  &  B.  3 :  238.     C.  509. 

91. 
Rede.     R.  &  B.  3  :  261.     C.  555. 

208. 
Redoubted.    R.  &  B.  3  :  325.     C. 

542.     144. 
Redress.    R.  &  B .  3 :  169.     C.  481 . 

130. 
Reduced.      R,   &   B.   3:387.     C. 

566.     71. 


Reed-like.     Balau.  4  :  299.    C.  616. 
Refection-time.     Fra  Lippo,  4 :  76. 

C.  :m. 

Reflection.     Red  Cott.   5:21.     C. 

744.     233. 
Refledge.    E.is.  -  Day,  4  :  49.     C. 

333. 
Reform.     Pacch.  5:318.     C.  802. 

178. 
Reformed.     R.  &  B.  3:449.     C. 

591.     50. 
Refuge.    Pau.  1:17.     C.  8.    281. 
Refuse.    R.  &  B.  3 :  385.     C.  56.5. 

243.  _ 

Refusings.     Warmg,   2:271.      C. 

265.     70. 
Regal.    Sor.  1 :  204.     C.  79.    34- 
RegaKa.    R.&B.  3:157.     C.  477. 

35- 
Regiment.     Red   Cott.   5:8.      C. 

739.     39. 
Regret.     Andrea,   4 :  88.     C.  348. 

183. 
Regularize.    R.  &  B.  3:318.     C. 

540.     61. 
Reigns.     Kev.  6  :  436 ;  7  :  105.      C. 

1005.     96. 
Reigning.      King  V.    1:389.      C. 

153.     255. 
Rejoice.    J.  Lee,  4  :  160.     C.  375. 

29. 
Relapse.     Luria,   2:370.     C.  302. 

31. 
Release,      La   S.  6:65.      C.   854. 

49. 
Relegation.     R.  &  B.  3:287.     C. 

528.     244. 
Relegation-place.     R.  &  B.  3:99. 

C.  453. 
Relic -flower.    Any  Wife,   2:68. 

C  188 
Relieve.'    Soul's  Tr.   2:342.     C. 

291.     225. 
Religion.    R.&B. 3: 376.    C.561. 
9- 

Bishop  B.  4: 113.     C.  357. 

II. 
Religionist.     R.  &  B.  3 :  446.     C. 

589.     196. 
Reluctant.    R.  &  B.  3 :  7.     C.  417. 

191. 
Relume.    R.  &  B.  3 :  17.     C.  421. 
Remain.      Any  Wife,   2  :  68.      C. 

188.     175. 
Remains.     Pippa,  1 :  .360.     C.  142. 
270. 

Soul's  Tr.  2  :  338.      C.  289. 

92. 


453 


Remanned 


Remanned.     E.  &  B.  3:456, 

5i);5.    30. 

Remedy.    R.  &B.3:105.    C.455, 

63. 
Remember.    The  Lab.  2 :  15.     C. 

168.  JO. 
Soul's  Tr.  2 :  355.    C.  297. 

95. 
Remembered.    R.&B.3:272.    C. 

523.     18. 
Remnants.     R.&B.  3:158.     C. 

ill.     201. 
Remorse.      Para.   1  :  99.      C.   40. 

260. 
R.   &   B.  3:372.     C.   560. 

216. 
Removed.     Life  in  L.  2 :  81.     C 

li)2.     III. 
Renan.     EpU.  Dra.  P.  4 :  259.     C. 

413. 

Red  Cott.  5  :  81.     C.  767. 

Rendering-up.     Agam.  6 :  12.     C 

.s;34. 

Renew.      Soul's  Tr.   2  :  351.      C. 

2!»5.     120. 
Renewal.      Rev.    6  :  439 ;    7  ;  110. 

C.  1006.     288. 
Renowned.     Red  Cott.  5 :  24.     C. 

745.     211. 
Repair.    Sor.  1 :  292.     C.  114.  55. 
Soul's  Tr.  2:342.     C.  291. 


INDEX 
C, 


Return 


271. 
R.   &   B.   3:103. 
157. 


C.  454. 


R.   &  B.   3:338,     C.  547. 
116. 

Red   Cott.   5:26.      C.   746. 

205. 
Repairs.     Bifur.   5:346.     C.   812. 

106. 
Repaired.     Straf.    1:139.     C.  53. 

214. 
Red   Cott.   5:34.      C.   749. 


Repay.     Patriot,   2 :  233.     C.  252. 

92. 
Rephan.    Reph.  6 :  431 ;  7  :  95,    C. 

1004. 
Report.     R.  &  B.  3  :  397.     C.  570. 

73- 
Repose.     Inn  A.  5  :  270.     C.  784. 

242. 
Represent.     Ber.  de  M.  6  :  299.    C. 

953.     115. 
Representative.     Red  Cott.  5  :  20. 

C.  744.     70. 
Represented.    R.&B.  3: 385.     C. 

565.    252. 


Repristination.    R.  &  B.  3  : 1.     C. 

414. 
Republic's.    Old  Pict.  2:44.     C. 

178.     10. 
Repugns.     R.  &  B.  3 :  58.     C.  437. 
Reputation.     A  Blot,  2 :  172.     C. 

228.     291. 
Repute.    Fifine,   4 :  386.     C.   704. 

194- 
Require.      Which,  6:401;   7:28. 

C.  991.     50. 
Rescue.     Gondola,  2 :  266.     C.  263. 

114. 
Resent.    R,  &  B.  3 :  426.     C.  581. 

291. 
Resentment.    R.  &  B,  3 :  105,     C. 
455.     63. 

R.   &   B.   3:251.      C.  514. 

119. 
Reserve.    Inn  A.  5:246.     C.  775. 

87. 
Resin.    Two  Poets,  6 :  92.    C.  865. 

234- 
Resolute.  R.«S;B.3:96.  C.452.  5. 
Resource.     Two  Poets,  6:97.     C. 

mi.   282. 

Respect.    R.&B.  3: 464.     C.596. 
247. 

Phei.  6:125.     C.  878.    255. 

Bad   D.   11.6:396;    7:19. 

C.  989.     205. 
Respite,    R.&B.  3:  262.     C.  518. 

248. 
Rest.     Gondola,  2:265.     C.  263, 

17- 
At  the  M.  5:  332.     C.  807. 

284. 

Forgiv.  5 :  362.  C.  818.   167. 

Hal.  &  Hob,  6 :  130.  C.  880. 

53- 
Restif.    R.&B.  3:97.     C.452. 
Restive.    R.  &  B.  3 :  325.     C.  542. 

63- 
Result.    In  a  B.  4:  136.     C.  366. 

63. 
Retreat.     Luria,   2:367.     C.   301. 

273- 
Crist.  &  M.  6 :  204.     C.  915. 


34- 


Retributive.    R.&B.  3:431.     C. 

583.     124. 
Retrieve.     R.   &  B.  3:383.     C. 

564.     160. 
Retrocede.     Fr.   Fu.   6:340.      C. 

969. 
Retrude.    Sor.  1 :  236.     C.  969. 
Return.     Pippa,    1:353.     C.   139. 

57- 
454 


Return 


Return.     Soul's   Tr.  2:343, 

295.     144. 

Sun,  (i :  250.     C.  933.     91 . 

Specul.   G  :  3<M  ;    7  :  13.     C. 

9S8.     162. 
Reveal.     Para.  1 :  106.     C.  42.     7. 
Revealed.      Sor.   1:316.     C.   123. 

47- 

R.  &  B.  3:374.      C.  560. 

217. 
Revel-rout.     Ari.  A.  5 :  205.     C. 

669. 
Revels-leader.    Ari.  A.  5  :  113.    C. 

633. 
Revelation.    R.  &  B.  3 :  294.     C. 

531.     120. 
Revenge.    R.  &B.3:14.     C.419. 
103. 

R.  &  B.  3:121.      C.  462. 

250. 
R.   ct   B.  3:369. 


INDEX  Right 

C.    Ribbon.    R.  &  B.  3 :  74.     C.  443. 


C.  559. 
119. 
R.  &  B.  3:450.      C.   591. 

Ixion,6:210.    C.918.     195. 

Reverberate.     R.  &  B.  3 :  387.     C. 

566.     262. 
Reverence.     Lady,   6 :  406  ;  7  :  44. 

C.  993.     282. 
Reverse.      Red   Cott.   5  :  27.      C. 

746.     13. 
Review.    Para.  1:49.    C.  21.    151. 

R.&B.3:318.    C.540.   81. 

Worst,  4:171.    C.  378.    62. 

Reward.      Colombe,   2  :  225.      C. 
248.     144. 

Luria,  2  :  384.    C.  308.   289. 

R.   &   B.    3:32.      C.  427. 

290. 

R.  &  B.  3:182.      C.   487. 

46. 
Rewarded.    La  S.  6 :  70.     C.  856. 

96. 
Reynolds.     Fifine,  4  :  402.     C.  712. 
Rhenmy.  Fifine,  4  :  426.  C.  726.  4- 
Rhine  -  land.     Pippa,   1 :  332.      C. 

131. 
Rhodes.     Druses,  2  :  128.     C.  210. 

R.&B.3:12.     C.419.    80. 

•  Balau.  4 :  263.     C.  602. 

RhjTning.    Two  Poets,  6  :  83.     C. 

861.     189. 
Rhyming-trick.    Two  Poets,  6 :  92. 

C.  865. 
Rhvthm.    Last  R.  2:  280.    C.  268. 

189. 
Rib-mauled.     Balau.   4:309.     C. 

620. 


Ribbon. 

III. 
Ribbou-Uke.    Red  Cott.  5: 76.    C. 

7(J5. 
Ribbon-ties.    A  Blot,  2 :  145.     C. 

217, 
Ribroast.    Aii.A.5:141.     C.  645. 

125. 
Riccardi.    Stat.  &  B.  2 :  322.     C. 
284. 

R.  &B.  3:2.     C.  415. 

Rich.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  357.     C.  298. 
200. 

Joch.6:227.     C.  925.     54. 

Rich  -  pavilioned.      Epil.   Eagle, 

6  :  241.     C.  930.     223. 
Riches.     Pietro,   6:173.     C.  902. 

280. 
Richlier.     R.   &    B.   3:397.      C. 

570. 
Richness.      Para.    1:53.      C.   22. 
18. 

Two  Cam.  6  :  262.     C.  938. 

90. 
Rid.     Pietro,  6 :  177.     C.904.     37. 
Riddance.     R.    &   B.   3:215.     C. 

500.     159. 
RiddUngly.      Ari.  A.   5  :  213.     C. 

671. 
Rider-host.     Ari.   A.   5:190.     C. 

6(M. 
Ridiculed.     R.   &  B.   3:49.     C. 

433.     124. 
Right.    Straf.  1:184.    C.  71.    254. 

Pippa,  1 :  3:38.     C.  133.     92. 

King   C.   1  :  397.      C.   156. 

225. 

Give,  2:2.     C.  163.     30. 

Colombe,   2 :  199.      C.   238. 

288. 

Soul's  Tr.  2 :  343.     C.  291. 

260. 
R.   &  B.   3  :  50.      C.  433. 


43- 


R.   &  B. 

278. 
R.   &  B. 

3 
3 

178. 
273. 

C. 
C. 

485. 

523. 

R.   &  B. 

3 

274. 

c. 

523. 

193. 
R.   &  B. 

287. 
R.  Sc  B. 

3 

360. 

c. 

555. 

3: 

365. 

c. 

557. 

102. 
R.  &   B. 

3 

379. 

c. 

562. 

271. 
R.  &  B. 

3 

456. 

c. 

594. 

153. 

455 


Right 


INDEX 


Eight.    R.  &  B.  3  :  407,     C.  597. 

28. 
Chris.-Eve,   4:10.     C.  322. 

145. 
Chrid.-Eve,   4  :  24,     C.  324. 

37. 
Ben  Ezra,  4  :  188.     C.  384. 

64. 
Red  Cott.  5 :  78,     C,  700. 

170. 

Ari.A.5:220.    C.G75.     65. 

Ari.   A.   5  :  233.       C,   078. 

175- 

La  S.  0 :  (i4.     C.  853.     138. 

La  S.  0 :  70.     C.  850.     267. 

■ Ber.  de  M.  0 :  298.     C,  953, 

Chris.  Sm.  0  :  315.     C.  900. 

128. 

Fr.  Fu.  0  :  .338.     C,  133.    92. 

Fr.    Fu.   0  :  339,       C,   909, 

288. 
Right-aimed,     Agam,   0 :  41.      C. 

845. 
Right-arm.     Sor.  1 :  279.     C.  108. 
Right-arm's.     One   Word,  4  :  120. 

C.  302. 
Right-hand.    Straf .  1 :  142.    C.  55, 
255. 

R.  &  B,  3:177,      C.  485, 

153. 

Ben  K.  0  :  385.     C.  372. 

Right  -  hearted.      Family,   0:248. 

C.  932.     112. 
Right  -  performance.      Flute  -  M, 

0  :  422  ;  7  :  77.     C.  1000, 
Right-through.     Chas,  A,  0:301, 

C.  977. 
Right-wing.      Echet.  0:154,      C. 

893. 
Rights.      After,    2:87.      C.    194. 

47. 
Bishop  B.  4 :  111.     C.  357, 

114. 
Rightlier.     Red  Cott.   5:44,      C. 


753 
Rillet-wise.    R.&B.  3:389,     C, 

50().     192. 
RiUets,    Fifine,  4 :  399,     C.  711. 
Rim -round.     Fifine,   4:414.      C. 

719. 
Ring.    R.  &  B.  3:183.     C.   487, 

156. 

"       "  R.  &  B.  3  :  104 


Ring-finger. 

479. 
Ring-metal. 

418. 
Ring  -  time. 

800.     237. 


R,  &  B.  3:9, 
Inn   A,   5:310. 


River-waters 
C. 


Ring-thing.     R.   &   B.  3:1. 

414. 
Ringing.     R.&B.  3:  439.     C.  587. 

107. 
Ripe.       Fifine,    4:441.       C.    734. 

73- 
Ripeness.      Rev.    0  :  439  ;    7 :  110. 

C.  100«;.     288. 
Rise.      Toccata,    2:30.      C.   175. 
234. 

Luria,     2:393.       C.     311. 

168. 

Luria,     2 :  403.       C.     315, 

184. 

Chris,-Eve,  4:23,     C.  324, 

91. 

Death  in  D.  4 :  194.     C.  386. 

241. 

La  8.0:62,     C.  853.    211. 

Pope   &   N.   0:402;   7:33. 

C.  992.     196. 

Rev.    0:439;    7:111.      C. 

1000.     138. 

Epil.  A,  0  :  440 ;  7  :  113.    C. 

1007.     208. 
Rising.      Before,   2:87.      C.   194. 

289. 
Risposting.    Master  H.  2 :  95.     C 

190. 
Rival.     Prince  H.  4 :  345.     C.  087. 

39- 
Rivalry.     Prince  H,   4:371,      C. 

097.     90. 
Riveled,     Para.  1 :  38.     C.  16. 
Rivelled.    R.  &  B.  3 :  29.     C.  426. 

49. 
River,    Soul's  Tr.  2  :  343.     C.  291. 

144. 
River-bells.    Colombe,  2 :  191.     C. 

235, 
River-channel,      Saul,   2 :  49.      C. 

180, 
River -flowers,     Colombe,  2:184. 

C.  232. 
River-head.    Chris.-Eve,  4 :  30.   C. 

320. 
River-Hke.     R,   &  B,  3:71,     C. 

442,     198. 
River-mouth,    Herv4,  5 :  355.     C 

815. 
River  -  pulse.      Chris.-Eve,  4 :  30. 
C.  320. 
C.    River-side.    R.  &  B.  3:408.     C. 

574. 
C.    River-springs.     Ari.  A.  5 :  221,    C 

073. 
C    River-waters.     Balau,  4 :  277.     C 
607. 
456 


Road 


INDEX 
C.  545 


Rome 


Road.    R.  &  B.  3:333 

45- 
Road-dust.  Flute-M.  G :  424  ;  7 :  79. 

C.  10(10. 
Road-edge.    Red  Cott.  5:3.     C. 
337. 

Red  Cott.  5:5.     C.  .338. 

Roadside-ditch.    R.  &  B.  3:377. 

C.  5G2. 
Roadside-place.    R.  &  B.  3 :  233. 

C.  507. 
Roadside-shrine.     R.  &  B.  3 :  219. 

C.  .501. 
Roam.     Gondola,  2  :  265.      C.  263. 

17- 
Roast.    Ari.  A.   5:125.     C.  638. 
282. 

Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  322.     C.  962. 

211. 
Rob.    R.  &  B.  3 :  376.    C.  561.    9. 
Robber-chief.    Pippa,  1 :  356.     C. 

140. 
Robbia's.    Stat.  &  B.  2 :  326,     C. 

285. 
Robertulus.    R.&B.  3:293.     C. 

530. 
Rocheted.    R.   &  B.  3:217.     C. 

501.    76. 
Rock.    R.  &  B.  3:190.     C.  490. 
119. 

Chris.-Eve,  4:8.      C.   318. 

144. 

Fifine,     4:433.        C.     730. 

263. 
Rock-built.    Red  Cott.  5 :  35.     C. 
749. 

Helen's  T,  6 :  386,     C.  601. 

149. 
Rock-chamber.     Sor.   1:220.      C. 

85. 
Rock-chasms.     EngUshm,   2  :  260. 

c.  2(;i. 

Rock-clamber.     La  S.  6  :  65.      C, 

854. 
Rock-face.    Ger.  de  L.  6 :  347.    C. 

972. 
Rock -flat.      Sludge,    4:254.      C. 

411. 
Rock -flower.      Englishm.   2:257. 

C.  260. 
Rock-level's.    Ari,  A.  5 :  215.     C. 

(i72. 
Rock-nerve.     Ari.  A.  5 :  134.     C. 

642. 
Rock-plants.     Flower's,   2:9.     C. 

166. 
Rock -ridge.     Chris,   Sm.   6:315. 

C.  960.     217, 


Rock-riving.    Red  Cott.  5 :  30.    C. 

747. 
Rock-rough.      Bifur.   5:347.      C 

812.     186. 
Rock -row.      Gram.    Fun.   2:310. 

C.  279. 
Rock-side.     Englishm.  2  :  257.     C. 

L'()0. 
Rock-spit.      Fr.   Fu.   6:337.      C. 

i)68.     115. 
Rock-stream.     Caliban,  4 :  207.   C. 

392. 
Rock-table.    A   Blot,  2:151.     C. 

219, 
Rock-top.     Colombe,   2  :  220.      C. 
247.     59. 

Fifine,  4  :  399.     C.  711, 

Rock -weeds,     Popul,   2:91.      C. 


195, 
Rocks, 


Rod. 


Para.     1 :  107. 

242. 
R.   &  B,  3:217, 

256. 
R.   &  B.   3:412. 

96. 
R.   &  B,  3:446, 

20. 


C.  42. 
C.  500. 
C.  576. 
C.  590. 


Rod  -  sweep.      One  Word,   4 :  12(). 

C.  362. 
'  Rogue.'    Ari.  A,  5 :  156.     C.  651. 

103.     146. 
Roland.      How,    2:5.       C.     Kw. 

III. 
Rolando-stroke.     R.    &   B.   3:6(). 

C.  440. 
Roman,    R,  &   B.  3:6.     C.  416. 

272. 
Roman-like.    R.  &  B.  3:  440.     C. 

589, 
Romance-books,    R.  &  B.  3 :  88. 

C.  449.    68. 
Romancing-work.    Sludge,  4 :  228. 

C.  400.  _ 
RomanelH,  Francesco.     Bea.  Sig. 

6 :  412  ;  7  :  57.     C.  996. 
Romano.     Sor.  1 :  235.     C.  76. 
Rome.    R.  &   B,  3:49.     C.  433. 
124. 

R.   &    B.  3:54, 

116. 

R,    &   B.  3:55. 

195, 
R.  *fe  B.   3:408, 

^  ^37-  „ 
R.  tt  B.  3  :  409. 

158. 

R.   &   B.   3:417. 

32.     213. 


C.  435. 

C.  436. 

C.  574. 

C.  574. 

C.  578. 


457 


Rome 

Rome. 


INDEX 

C.  587. 
C.  594. 


R.  &  B.  3:440, 
213. 

R.   <t  B.   3:458. 

269. 
Rome-waid.     R.  &  B.  3  :  53.     C, 

435. 
Rome-work.    R.   &  B.  3 : 1.     C. 

414. 
Rondure.      R.    &    B.    3:1.       C. 

415. 
Roof.     Red  Cott,   5:2.      C.   737. 

116. 
Roof -shattered.     Ari.  A.  5:206. 

C.  «J9. 
Roof-tile.     Red  Cott.  5:46.     C. 

753. 
Roof-tree.    Straf .  1 :  170.      C.  65. 

241. 
Room.     Sor.  1:201.     C.  78.     194. 

R.   &    B.    3:92.      C.   450. 

90. 
Appear.    5 :  351.       C.    814. 

157. 
Room -full.      Pippa,    1:343.      C. 

135. 
Roon.    Red  Cott.  5 :  75.     C.  764. 
Root-strings.       Sor.    1  :  233.       C. 

90. 
Roots.     AbtV.  4:182.     C.  382. 

25. 
Rope-girt.    R.   &   B.  3:472.      C. 

599. 
Rope^tangle.     Ari.  A.  5:210.     C. 

670. 
Rope-wreath.     Fifine,   4:408.     C. 

716. 
Rose.     R.  &   B.   3:371.     C.  559. 
252. 

Ari.    A.    5:149.      C.    648. 

128. 

Pietro,     6:175.       C.     903. 

92. 
Rose  -  beautv.      Wanting,   6 :  193. 

C.  193.     147. 
Rose -blood.      Cleon,   4:118 


Rough-rasps 
By  Fire.   2:61.      C. 


359. 
Rose  -  bloom.      La  S.   6 :  55. 

850. 
Rose-braided.     Pippa,  1 :  348. 

137. 
Rose-bud.     R.   &  B.  3:426. 

.".81.     49. 
Rose-dew.    R.   &  B.  3:141. 

470.     107. 
Rose-festoon.     Fifine,  4 :  425. 

725. 
Rose  -  flame.     Fifine,   4 :  406. 

715. 


Rose-flesh. 

185. 
Rose-glow.     La  S.  6 :  67.     C.  855. 
Rose-jaeynth.     Dis  Al.  4 :  177.     C. 

380. 
Rose  -  lichen.      Sor.     1 :  216.       C. 

84. 
Rose-light.    Sor.  1 :  295.     C.  115. 

Ivkn,  6 :  136.     C.  883.     229. 

Rose-bke.     Ari.   A.   5:149.      C. 

648.     59. 
Rose-mesh.    Ben  Ezra,  4 :  187.    C. 

384. 
Rose -mists.     Balau.  4:322.     C. 

625. 
Rose-misted.     A  Blot,  2 :  153.     C. 

220. 
Rose -peach.     Pippa,  1:344.      C. 

136. 
Rose-smit.     Ari.  A.  5 :  100.      C. 

629. 
Rose-streak.    Apol.  &  F.  6:292. 

C.  951.     250. 
Rose -streaked.     Ari.   A.   5:232. 

C.  677. 
Rose-wreath.    Ari.  A.  5 :  176.     C. 

659. 
Rose's.    R.  &  B.  3 :  235.    C.  508. 

131. 
Rosolio.     R.    &    B.  3:318.      C. 

540. 
Ross-shire.     Don.  6:195.     C.  912. 
Rossini.      Bishop  B.   4:100.      C. 


At  the  M.  5:335.     C.  808. 
A.  5:231. 


Rosy. 

60. 
Rosy-finger-tips.     Ai 

C.  677. 
Rosy -strewn.      Para.   1:74.      C 

30 
Rotten-rich.    Sor.  1 :  232.     C.  90. 
Rotten-rimged.    Master  H.  2 :  96. 

C.  197. 
Rottenness.    R.   &   B.  3:37.     C. 
C.        429.     90. 

Rough.    R.  &  B.  3:  339.     C.  547. 

Joch.'6:213.     C.  919.     292. 
C.    Rough-foot.     FUght,  2:291.      C. 

271. 
C.    Rough-hammered.    Prottis,  2 :  321. 

C.  283. 
C    Rough-hewed.      Ari.  A.   5:118. 

C.  636. 
C.    Rough-hewn.    Old  Pict.  2 :  40.    C. 

177. 
C.    Rough  -  rasps.     Sor.   1 :  264.      C 

103. 
458 


Rough-raw 


INDEX 


Safe 


Kou-h-raw.     R.    &  B.  3:22.     C. 

4'S.i.     Ii6. 
Roug-h-scratched.     R.  &  B.  3:  4C9. 

C.  rm. 

Rough -smooth.      Inn   A.   5:272. 
C.  785. 

Pisgah  I.  5 :  342.     C.  810. 

Rouher.      Red    Cott.    5:67.      C. 

7(il. 
Rouncey-bom.    Ari.  A.  5 :  155.  C. 

(j50. 
Roundabout.     Mar.    Rel.  6:123. 

C.  877. 
Rouse.    Give,  2:2.     C.  163.    30, 
Roved.    R.  «S;B,  3:400.     C.  571. 

68. 
Row.    Stat.  &  B.  2:  328.     C.  286. 

229. 
Royal.      Balau,    4:322.      C.   625. 

189. 
Royalty.     Reph.6:432;  7:96.  C. 

1004.     29. 
Rubbish.     R.   &  B.  3:331.      C. 

545.     150. 
Rubble -heap.      Red  Cott.   5:35. 

C.  749. 
Rubble-stone.     R.   &  B.  3:196. 

C.  492. 
Rubens.      In    a    B.    4:146.       C. 

370, 
Ruby.     Pacch.    5:328.      C.  806. 

89. 
Ruby-mine.    Red  Cott.  5:  44.     C. 

752. 
Ruby-rimmed.  Women  &  R.  2 :  85. 

C.  193. 
Ruby-specks.    Forgiv.  5 :  365.     C. 

819. 
Ruddy-marked.    Red  Cott.  5 :  41. 

C.  752. 
Rude  -  and  -  rough.     Geo.  B.  D. 

6:319.     C.  961. 
Rudel.    Rudel,  4  :  123.     C.  361. 
Rudely.     Pau.  1 :  7.     C.  4.     269. 
Kudesby.    Joch.  6:218.     C.  921. 
Rudyard.    Straf .  1 :  129.     C.  50. 
Ruffle.    Chris.-Eve,  4 :  5.     C.  317. 

38. 
Ruin.     Para.  1 :  40.     C.  17.     50. 

Para.  1 :  80.     C.  32.     142. 

Ruin-top.     R.  &   B.   3:256.      C. 

.-.16.     94. 
Ruined.     Worst,  4:170.     C.   378. 

214. 
Rule.    R.  &  B.  3 :  133.     C.  467. 
"3- 

R.  &  B.  3  :  205.     C.   531. 

61. 


Rule.    Red  Cott.  5 :  21.     C,  744. 

233. 
Ari.    A.   5  :  130.       C.   CAl. 

Ruling.      Fifine,   4:413.     C.   719. 

155. 
Rumble-tumble.  Two  Poets,  6 :  82. 

C.  Ktil. 

Rummage.     R.    &   B.  3:10.      C. 

418.     203. 
Rummer-glass.     Clive,  6 :  155.     C. 

893. 
Run-away.    R.  &  B.  3:196.     C. 

4i)2. 
Rural.     Red  Cott.  5  :  22.     C.  744. 

61. 
Rush.      Fifine,   4:  413.      C.    719. 

282. 
Rushed.      Crist.    2:19.      C.    170. 
234. 

R.   «t  B.  3:355.     C.  553. 

7- 
Rushlight-end.     R.  &  B.  3:377. 

C.  5(>2.     128. 
Ruskin.     Inn  A.  5 :  249.     C.  776. 

Inap.     6:400;    7:26.       C. 

991. 
Russet-sheathed.    Sor.  1 :  212.    C. 

82. 
Rustle-down.      Englishm.   2  :  257. 

C.  260. 
Rustle-forth.     Sor.  1 :  235.     C.  91. 
Rutilant.     R.  &  B.  3 :  76.     C.  444. 

68. 
Rye-grass.    Camel-D.  6:258.     C. 

937. 


s 

Chas. 


A.  6:363. 


Sable  -  stoled. 

C.  978. 
Sabyne.       Colombe,    2:192.       C. 

235. 
Sackerson.     Ned  B.  6:150.      C. 

891. 
Sacrament-lace.    Master  H.  2:93. 

c.  im. 

Sacrifice.     Inn  A.  5:  269.     C.  784. 

148. 
Sacrosanct.     R.  &  B.  3:195.     C. 

492. 
Sad.     Pau.  1 :  13.     C.  7.     75.     89. 

Dis    Al.    4:177.      C.    3«0. 

247. 
Sadlier.     Fears,  5:345.      C.  811. 

57. 


Safe.    Para.  1 :  41.     C.  17.    40. 
459 


Safe                                     IND 

EX                                   Sands 

Safe.     Old  Pict.  2:38.      C.  176. 

Saint's  -  book.      Colombe,    2 :  195. 

285. 

C.  236. 

. Instans,    2:241.       C.    255. 

Saints.       R.    &    B.    3:146.       C. 

162. 

472. 

Ari.    A.    5:1.36.      C.    643. 

T>         e.     T>        0.0  rr»          /^       P-K.- 

26. 

24. 

Camel-D.   0:259.      C.   937. 

Sainte-Beuve.     Fr.  Fu.6:341.    C. 

115- 

970. 

Safe-embosomed.     R.  &  B.  3:15. 

Sake,    R,  &  B,  3:427.     C,  582, 

C.  420. 

157. 

Safe -housed.      Pan,  6:189.      C. 

Salamander-like.    R.&B.  3:155. 

909. 

C.  476.     13. 

Safe  -  return  -  price .    Aeam .  6:29. 

Salamander  -  sign.      Crist.   6 :  202, 

C.  841. 

C.  914. 

Safe-smiling.     Dis  Al.  4 :  174.     C. 

Salem.      Joch.    6:215.       C.    920. 

379. 

190. 

Safe  -  stabled.      Camel-D.  6:258. 

Salingxierra,  TaureUo.    Sor.  1 :  195. 

C.  937. 

C.  76. 

Safelier.    Sun,  6:249.     C.  933. 

Salinguerra's,      Sor,    1:322.       C, 

Safety.      La    S.    6:56.      C.    850. 

126,     90. 

170. 

Sallust.      Chris.-Eve,    4:16.       C. 

Don.  6 :  196.     C.  912.     45- 

321, 

Safetv-guards.      Ked  Cott.   5:11. 

Saloon,    R.  &  B.  3:22.     C.  423. 

C.  74U. 

162, 

Safety-screen.     Fr.  Fu.  6 :  332.     C. 

Salt.      R.   &    B.   3:75.      C.   444, 

<366.     10. 

18. 

Saffron  -  vested.      Druses,   2 :  113. 

Salt-fish-slice,    Ari.  A.  5 :  115.    C. 

C.  203. 

(i;34. 

Sagaciousest.      Ivkn,    6:138.      C. 

Salt-sweeping.     Pau.  1 :  16.     C.  8. 

885. 

Salvation.     Sor,  1:313.      C.    122. 

Sagacity.     Luna,  2 :  376.     C  305. 

109. 

6_ 

Salve.     R.  &  B.  3:57,     C,  436, 

Sagacity's.    Dan.  Bar.  6 :  305.     C. 

no. 

956.     214. 

Salves,    Red  Cott.  5 :  85.     G.  769. 

Sage.    Sor.  1 :  .316.     C.  123.     47. 

235. 

R.   &   B.   3:453.      C   592. 

Salvini.     Inn  A.  5 :  293.     C.  793. 

88. 

Samminiato.     One  Word,  4 :  128. 

Sage-leaf.     Prol.    Fer.  6:239.     C. 

C.  363. 

929.     19. 

Sample-speech.      R.   &   B,   3:20. 

Sages,     Para.  1 :  89.     C.  36.     103. 

C.  422.     96. 

Said.     R.   &   B.   3:278.     C.   525. 

San   Giovanni.     R.    &  B.  3:243. 

81. 

C.  511. 

Sailor -craft.     Fifine,  4:419.      C. 

San  Lorenzo,    R.  &  B,  3 : 2.     C. 

T22. 

415, 

Saint.       Pippa,   1:350.       C.    138. 

Sanctity.      R.   &   B.  3:382,      C. 

18. 

564.     276. 

Bifur.     5:347.        C.     812. 

Sand.      Forgiv.    5:367.      C.   820. 

224. 

114. 

St.   David's.      CUve,  6:158.      C. 

Sand-blind.      Dev.   6:429;  7:90. 

894. 

C.  1003.     38. 

Saint  John.    R.  «6;  B.  3:  226.     C. 

Sand-fly.     R.   &  B.  3:367.     C. 

504. 

558. 

Saint  Somebody-or-other.    R.  &  B. 

Sand-grain.    R.  &  B.  3:280,     C, 

3:42.3.     C  580.     126. 

526. 

Saint  Thomas.     R.   &   B.  3:210. 

Sand-paths.    Dis  Al.  4:176.     C. 

C.  498. 

.380. 

Saint's.    Ponte  A.   6:409;    7:50. 

Sands.     Fifine,    4:433.     C.    730. 

C.  995.    24. 

263. 

460 


Sandal-buds  INDEX  'Sbuddikina 

Para.   1:90.      C. 


Sandal  -  buds. 

Sandal-trick.     Ari.  A.  5:221,     C. 

G73. 
Sandal-wooded.     Red  Cott.  5 :  22. 

C.  744. 
Sanguine-heart.    Sor.  1 :  246.      C 

95. 
Santa  Croce,  Onofrio.      Ceneiaja, 

5:369.     C.  821. 
Santi,  Ser.    Bea.  Sig.  6 :  414 ;  7 :  62. 

C.  997. 
Sap -like.     Red  Cott.  5:86.      C. 

769. 
Saponian.    Sor.  1 :  249.     C.  96. 
Sapphire.     R.   &  B.  3:112.     C. 
458. 

One  Word,  4 :  128.     C.  363. 

Sapphirine.     Para.   1 :  55.     C.   23. 
238. 

Gar.  de  L.  6 :  350.     C.  973. 

Sarcasm.      R.    &   B.   3:171.      C. 

482.     99. 
Sardanapalns'.     Red  Cott.  5 :  51. 

C.  755.     68, 
Sarsnet  -  stripe.     Red   Cott.   5 :  7. 

C.  739. 
Satam.    Joch.  6:215.     C.  920. 
Satan.     Doctor,  6:182.     C.  906. 
49. 

Doctor,    6  :  187.       C.    908. 

41. 
Satan -faced.     Ivkn,   6:  134.      C. 


882 


c. 


Satan-like.     R.   &  B.  3:22. 

423.     83. 
Satan's.     R.  &B.  3:29.     C.  426. 

136. 
Satiates.     R.  &  B.  8 :  292.     C.  530. 

88. 
Satiating-point.     Sor.  1 :  225,      C, 

87. 
Satiety,    R.  &  B.  3:  427.     C.  582. 

87. 
Satin-muffled.    Fifine,  4 :  393.     C. 

708. 
Satisfaction.     Two  Poets,   6 :  103. 

C.  869,    227. 
Satisfied,      R.  &  B,  3:137,      C. 

468.     103, 
Satyr-adjuncts.      Ari,   A,   5:  175, 

C.  fir.s. 

Satyr-family.     R.  &  B.  3 :  13.     C. 

419. 
Satyr-frisks.    Ari.  A.  5 :  175.     C. 

658. 
Satyr-jokes.     Ari.   A,  5:175.     C 

658. 


Satyr-love,     R.   &   B.  3:157.     C. 

476. 
Satyr-play.     Ari.   A.   5:122.      C. 

6:57. 
Sauce.     R.   &   B.   3:48.     C.  433. 

Sauce-smothered.     Fifine,  4 :  425, 
.  C-.  725. 
Sausage-selling.      Ari,   A.   5 :  155. 

C.  650. 
Sausage-wise.     Ari.  A.  5 :  122.     C 

637.     231. 
Savage-tasted,     Cleon,  4 :  118,     C, 

359, 
Save.    Sor.  1 :  293,     C.  114.     38. 
The  Confess.  2 :  17,     C.  169, 

231. 
Soul's   Tr,  2 :  345,     C,  292, 

86. 
R.   &  B,  3:104,      C.  455. 

no. 
R.   &  B.  3  :  457.     C.  594. 

137- 

Two  Poets,  6 :  112.     C.  873. 

252. 
Save-all.     R.  &  B.  3 :  468,     C,  597. 
Saves.     R.   &  B.  3 :  268.     C.  521. 
171. 

R.   &  B.  3:414.     C.  576. 

162. 
Saved.     R.    &   B.   3:47.     C.  433.' 

36. 
Savile.     Straf .  1 :  137.     C.  53. 
Saving-clauses.     Before,  2 :  87.    C. 

194. 
Savior,    R.&B,  3:258,     C,  517. 

86, 
Saviors,    Geo,   B,  D,  6:321.     C. 

962,     239. 
Savors.    R.&B.  3:442.     C.  588. 

265, 
Savory-stalk,     Ari.  A.  5 :  108,     C. 

632, 
Saw.      Old  Pict,   2:39,      C.   176. 
280. 

In  a  B,  4 :  134,    C.  365.    70. 

Bad  D.  I.  6 :  394  ;  7 :  15,    C. 

989,     226, 
Say,     Lost  Mis,  2:20,      C.    170. 

86. 
Soul's  Tr.  2:. 339.     C.  290. 

91. 
R.  &   B.  3:252.      C.   515.' 

132. 
Two  Poets,  6 :  112.     C.  873. 

252. 
'Sbuddikins.    R.&B.  3: 281.     C. 
526, 


461 


Scaffold-planks 


INDEX 


ScafFold-planks.    R.  «fe  B.  3:  404. 

C.  57-J. 
ScafFold-steps.   R.&B,3:461.    C. 

59.5. 
Scaffold-vantage.  Camel-D.  6 :  258. 

C.  937.      202. 

Scale.      R.    &   B.   3:70.     C.  442. 

150- 

Jocli.  (5 :  22.5.     C.  924.    222. 

Scale-mail's.      Clive,   6 :  156.      C 

894. 
Scaliger.     R.  &  B.  3 :  290.     C.  529. 
Scallop-striped.     Red   Cott.  5 :  14. 

C.  741. 
Scallops.    Red  Cott.  5 :  14.    C.  741. 
Scalp^sease.      Karsh.   4 :  65.     C. 

338. 
Scaly-footed.      Too   Late,   4 :  181. 

C.  382. 
Scandal.     R.  &  B.  3:  47.     C.  433. 

36. 
Scandal-rag.      R.   &   B.  3:8.     C. 

417.     171. 
Scanned.      Don.   6:198.      C.  913, 

94- 
Scant.    Eas.-Day,   4:51.     C.  333. 

95- 
Scantling.    Joch.  0:221.     C.  922. 

239. 
Scapegrace.     R.  &  B.  3:380.     C 

56.3.     173. 
Scarce-suspected.    Red  Cott.  5 :  27. 

C.  746. 
Scare.    Pippa,  1 :  36.5.    C.  144.    51. 
Scarlet-skein.     Inn  A.  5 :  277.     C. 

787. 
Scathe.     Rev.  6 :  439  ;  7 :  110.     C. 

1006.     288. 
Scene-picture.    Up  —  Down,  2:  33. 

C.  174. 
Scenes.     By  Fire.   2:62.     C.  186. 
187. 

R.  &  B.   3:17.3.     C.  482. 

129. 
Scenting.      How  it  S.  4:58.      C. 


.3.36. 


Ber.  de  M.  6:298. 


Sceptre. 

953. 
Sceptre-sway.    Ari.  A.  5 :  185.     C. 

662. 
ScheUing's.     Bishop  B.  4:  101.    C. 

3.53. 
Scheme.     AbtV.  4:185.     C.  383. 

245. 
Schemes.      Sor.    1 :  280.       C.    109. 

igS. 

Schiphaz.    Joch.  6:211.     C.  918. 
Scholar.     Pan.  1:7.     C.  4. 


Scrappy 

C. 


Scholar.      Dev.  6:428;  7:89. 

1002.       76. 
Scholar's -wit.     R.  &  B,  3:169. 

C.  482. 
School-correctness.    Ari.  A.  5 : 1-36. 

C.  643. 
Schoolboy  -  fashion.       Red    Cott. 

5 :  73.     C.  764. 
Schumann.     Dis  Al.   4:174.      C. 
379. 

Founder,   6:387.      C.  947. 

169. 
Schumann's.     Fifine,   4 :  424.      C. 

725. 
Science.     Fifine,  4:432.     C.   729. 

132. 
ScintiUant.      R.    &  B.  3:  76.     C. 

444.     68. 
Sciolist.     Red  Cott.  5:  31.     C.  748. 

272. 
Scirocco.     Englishm.   2 :  257.      C. 

260.     129. 
Scooped -out.      Ivkn,   6:141.      C. 

886. 
Scorn.      Druses,   2:115.      C.   204. 
116. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  292.     C.  530.    8. 

Fifine,  4:  391.    C.  706.    225. 

Pietro,  6 :  173.    C.  902.   280. 

Scorned.    Para.  1 :  .50.    C.  21.    194. 
Scorning.     Apol.  &  F.  6 :  292.     C. 

951.     III. 
Scorpion.     R.    &    B.   3:204.      C. 

495. 
Scorpion-body.     Prince  H.  4 :  350. 

C.  689. 
Scorpion-like.    Ari.  A.  5 :  125.     C 

638. 
Scorpion-scourge.    Inn  A.  5 :  299. 

C.  795. 
Scorpion-sort.    Ari.  A.  5 :  108.     C. 

631. 
Scot-free.     R.  &  B.  3:360.     C. 

555      12^ 
Scotch-pebble.    Inn  A.  5:252.    C. 

in.    138. 

Scourgings.     Fr.   Fu.   6 :  340.     C 

969.     62. 
Scout.    Pretty  W.  2:  78.     C.  191. 

139. 
Scramble.      R.    &   B.   3:72.      C. 

442.     85. 
Scrape.     R.  &  B.  3: 189.     C.  489. 

49. 
Scraper-rake.    R.  &B.3:409.    C. 

574. 
Scrappy.    Youth  &  A.  4 :  219.     C. 

396.     267. 


462 


Scratch 


INDEX 


Sebald 


Scratch.     R.  &  B..'{:215.     C.  .500. 

i8o. 
Screen.     Lust  R.  2 :  280.     C.  268. 

278. 
Screws.     R.  &  B.  3 :  102.     C.  454. 

207. 
Scripture  -  trees.     Ned   B.  6:145. 

C  889. 
Sci-itch.    Sor.  1 :  226.     C.  87. 
Scroggs.     Ned  B.  6 :  145.     C.  889. 
Scroll-head.    Red  Cott.  5:7.     C. 

739. 
ScroU  -  work.     Druses,   2 :  99.     C. 
198. 

Fust,  6 :  378.     C.  984. 

Scrub.     R.  &  B.  3:248.     C.  513. 

160. 
Scruple-splitting.    Fr.Fu.  6:330. 

C.  'Mr,. 

Scruples.      Prince   H.  4:363.     C. 

694.     176. 
Scrutoire.     R.  &  B.  3 :  53.     C.  435. 
Scull  -  things.     Ben  Ezra,   4 :  190. 

C.  385. 
Sculptor's-work.    St.  Prax.  4:91. 

C.  349. 
Scythe -sweep.    Red  Cott.  5:25. 

C.  745. 
Sea.    Straf .  1 :  156.     C.  60,     238. 

: Englishm.   2:260.     C.  261. 

167. 

R.   &  B.  3:190.     C.   490. 

120. 

R.  &  B.  3:245.      C.   512. 

121.     183. 

R.  «fcB.3:387.    C.  566.    31. 

Sea-armament.     Agam.  6 :  14.     C. 

835. 
Sea-beast.     Fr.    Fu.  6:  339.      C. 

969. 
Sea-beaten,    Pau.  1 :  22.     C.  10. 
Sea-brine.    Two  Poets,  6 :  78.     C 

859, 
Sea-bull.    Artemis,  4 :  62.     C.  337. 
Sea-cave.    Ari.  A.  5 :  105.     C.  631. 
Sea -creature.       Colombo,   2:206. 

C.  241. 
Sea-depths,     Sor.  1 :  308.     C.  120, 
Sea-drift.    Sor.  1 :  198,     C.  77. 
Sea-face.     Ari.  A.  5 :  99,     C.  628. 
Sea-faring.     Waring,   2 :  274.      C 

2()(). 
Sea-Fifine,     Fifine,4:440.    C.  733. 
Sea-foam-born.     Dan.  Bar.  6:  311. 

C.  958. 
Sea-fowl.     R.   &  B.  3:367.      C. 

558.     254. 
Sea-froth,    Ari,  A,  5: 120.    C.636. 


Sea-fruit,     Englishm,   2:258,     C. 

260. 
Sea -furniture.     Bishop   B,  4:94, 

a  350, 
Sea-jelly.     Death  in  D.  4 :  194.     C. 

387. 
Sea-lark.    J.  Lee,  4:161.     C.  375. 
Sea-like.    Sor.  1 :  245.    C.  95.     102. 

Fifine,  4  :  420.    C.  723.    172. 

Sea  -  lover.     Dis  Al.  4 :  174.      C. 

379. 
Sea-might.      Ari.   A.   5:232.      C. 

678. 
Sea  -  paths.      Druses,  2 :  109.      C. 

202. 
Sea-pine.      Englishm.   2:261.     C. 

261. 
Sea-products.     Agam.   6:28.      C. 

841. 
Sea-scented.    Meeting,  2:21.     C. 

170. 
Sea -search.      Balau.  4:  276.      C. 

()07. 
Sea  -  shore.      Flight,  2 :  289.      C. 

271.     213. 
Sea -side.      R.  &  B,  3:328,      C, 

543.     191. 
Sea-skiff,     Red  Cott,  5:93,      C. 

771. 
Sea-smell.     Red  Cott.   5:16.     C. 

742. 
Sea -stretch.     Balau,   4:  295,     C. 

614. 
Sea-swoln.      Red   Cott.   5:2.      C. 

737. 
Sea-thing.     Fifine,  4 :  417,     C.  721, 
Sea-tracklessness,     Fifine,  4 :  419. 

a  722. 
Sea-troughs.     Ari.  A.  5:190.     C. 

664. 
Sea-wide.     Balau.  4 :  265,     C.  603. 
Sea-wools.     Cleon,  4 :  115,     C.  ."^5.^. 
Sea -worn.     Ari.   A.   5:  118.      C. 

635, 
Sea's.    R.  &B.3:387,    0.566,    2. 
Seabreaeh.     Sot.  1 :  241.     C.  93. 
Seacoast-nookful.     Red  Cott.  5:1. 

C.  TM.     173. 
Seaweed-alphestes.   Ari.  A.  5 :  108. 

C.  631. 
Seamed.    R.  &  B,  3  :  27.     C,  425. 

68, 
Search,    Love  in  L.  2 :  80,     C,  191. 

34. 
Sears,     Bishop  B.  4:  106.     C.  355, 

16. 
Seasons.    Para.  1:91.    C.37.    206. 
Sebald.    Pippa,  1 :  332.     C.  131. 


463 


Sebzevar 


INDEX 


Self-dispraise 


Sebzevar.     TiUar,  6:2C9.     C.  941. 

i86. 
Secchi.     Eed  Cott.  5 :  26.     0.746. 
Second.      La  S.  6  :  GH.       C.  855. 

72. 
Second-rate.    R.&B.  3:113.     C. 

459. 
Secrecy.    R.  &  B,  3:  41.     C.  430. 

102. 

Secret.      Pietro,   6:171.      C.   901. 

97- 
Plot-C,   6:266.       C.    940. 

199. 
Geo.  B.  D.  6:  320,     C.  961. 

167. 
Secrets.    Para.  1:50.    C.21.    194. 

Para.  1 :  63.     C.  26.     47. 

R.   &  B.    3 :  92.      C.  450. 

220. 
Seereter.     Eas.  -  Day,  4 :  49.     C. 

333. 
Secure.    Para.  1 :  39.    C.  17.    240. 
Sedition-sick.     Ari.  A.  5 :  180.     C. 

660. 
See.     Para.  1 :  73.     C.  30.     278. 
King    V.   1:381.      C.   150. 

92. 
Childe  R.  2:3.32.     C.  287. 

170. 

R.  &  B.  3: 14.     C.  420.    7. 

R.  &  B.  3:189.      C.  489. 

182. 
Sludge,     4:244.       C.     407. 

160. 
Prince  H.  4:333.     C.  682. 

161. 
Fifine,     4:427.        C.     727. 

283. 
Red    Cott.    5:2.      C.    737, 

Ger.  de  L.  6:  347.     C.  972. 

so- 
Seeing.      Fifine,  4:427.      C:  727. 

126. 
Seed.    R.   &  B.  3:362. 


J.    Lee,    4 :  156, 
181, 


C.   556. 
C.    374. 
C. 


Seed  -  sort.     Mnl^y,    6 :  163. 

897, 
Seem,    Soul's  Tr,  2 :  345,     C.  292, 

153. 
Seemed.    Druses,  2 :  140,     C,  214, 
143- 

R,   &  B,  3:243,     C,  511, 

288. 
Seeming.     Flute-M.  6 :  424  ;  7 :  80. 

C.  1001.     8. 


Seeming-dubious.     R.  &  B.  3:  329. 

C.  544. 
Seeming-solitary.    R.  &  B,  3:25, 

C.  424.     12. 
Seeming-to-be,    Agam,  6 :  24.     C. 

839. 
Seigneur -like.     Red  Cott.  5:48. 

C.  754. 
Seine-side.    App.  Fail.  4 :  257.     C. 

412. 
Selection.      Para.    1 :  34.      C.   15. 

278. 
SeK.    Joch.  6:2.32.     C.  927.    75. 
Self-abandoned.     Li  a  B.  4 :  136. 

C.  -Myl). 
Self-abasement.    R.  &  B.  3:231. 

C.  507. 
Self-abnegation.     R.  &  B.  3:383. 

C.  5<J4.     229. 
Self-abolishment.    R .  &  B .  3 :  3.38. 

C.  547. 
Self-acquainters,     Old  Pict,  2 :  41. 

C.  177. 
Self-appointed.      Fr.   Fu.   6:3.30. 

C.  965. 
Self -approving.     Luria,  2 :  388.    C. 

309. 
Self-authorized,    R.  &  B,  3:209. 

C.  497. 
Self  -  complacency.     Para.   1 :  64. 

C.  26.    206. 
Self-complacent.      Druses,   2 :  116. 

C:  205. 
Self-conceit.      Pippa,   1 :  346,      C 

i:k.    227. 

Self  -  consciousness.      Sor.   1 :  225. 

C.  87. 
SeM-dealt.    R.&B.  3: 90,    C,  450. 
203. 

R.   &  B.  3:298.     C.  532. 

48. 
Self-deceit.    Para.  1:100.     C.  40. 
SeK-deception.    La  S.  6:60.      C. 

852. 
Self-defence.    R.  &  B.  3:  329.     C. 

-jU.     266. 
Self -delight.     BLshop  B.  4:10-3. 

C.  353. 
Self-delusion.      Para.   1:98,      C. 

.39, 
Self-devotedness.    Red  Cott.  5 :  72. 

C.  763. 
Self-devotii^.     Red  Cott.  5:67. 

C.  762. 
Self -display.    Sor.  1:2.30.     C,  89. 

Prince  H.  4 :  347.     C.  688, 

Self -dispraise.     Bishop  B.  4:103. 


C,  353. 


164 


Self-evident 


INDEX 


Sense 


Self-evident.    Sor.  1 :  210.     C.  81. 

^  51- 

Self  -  expenditure.     Joch.  6:224. 

C.  923. 
Self-explained,     R.  &  B,  3:209. 

C.  497. 
Self-forgettingr.     R.  &   B.  3:140, 

C.  470.     no. 
Self-gathered.    Gram.  Fun.  2 :  310. 

C.  279. 
Self-homicide.    Ari.A.  5:203.    C. 

668. 
Self-immolation.     Balau.   4:279. 

C.  608. 
Self-impelled.     Balau.  4 :  295.     C. 

614, 
Self-indulgence.    Red  Cott.  5 :  65. 

C.  7(!1. 
Self-indulgent.     R.   &   B.   3:383. 

C.  564.     163. 
Self-intrenched.    Red  Cott.  5 :  84. 

C.  768. 
Self-knowledge.     R.  &  B.  3:429. 
C.  583.     58. 

Bishop  B.  4:  103.     C  353. 

Fr.    Fu,    6:337.      C.    968. 

"5- 

Self-mistrusting.     R.  &  B.  3:  395. 

C.  569.     21. 
Self  -  ordained.      Eas.-Day,   4 :  48, 
^  C,  332, 
Self-perception,    Sor.   1 :  239.      C. 

93. 
Self-possessed.    Straf .  1 :  163.     C 

62. 
Self -preservative.   Red  Cott,  5 :  43. 

C.  752.     180. 
SeK- punished.      R.   &   B.   3:84. 

0.447.     211. 
Self-reflectings.     Sor.  1:230.      C. 

89. 
Self-reliance.     Para.  1 :  40.     C.  17. 
Self -repugnant.     Para.  1 :  36.      C 

16. 
Self-respect.    R.  &  B,  3:  294.     C. 
531. 

Red   Cott.   5:93.      C.   771. 

163, 
Self-revealment,    Sor.  1:231.     C. 

90. 
Self-sacrifice.     R.    &   B.   3:211. 
C.  498.     181, 

R,   &   B,   3:392,      C.  568. 

54. 
Sludge,    4:252.      C.    410. 

51. 
Ari.    A.    5:131.      C.    641. 

149. 


Self-sacriHcing.    R.   &  B.  3:383. 
C.  564.     163. 

R,  &  B.  3 :  .Wtj,    C.  5fJ6,  94. 

Self-same.     Chris.-Eve,  4:7.     C, 


R.  &  B.  3:125. 


C. 
C. 
C. 
C. 
C. 


318.     164. 
Self-satisfaction. 

C.  ■HA.     96. 
Self-satisfied.     R.&B.  3:429.    C. 

582.     227. 
Self-scathed.     Fr.Fu.  6:340.     C. 

969.     282. 
Self-seekers,     R.  &  B.  3:  298.     C. 

5.;2.     119. 
Self -sentenced,     R,  &   B,  3:84. 

C.  447.     211, 
SeK -slaying,     Agam,   6:32, 

842. 
Self  -  sought,     Fifine,   4 :  385. 

703, 
Self -spun.     R.   &   B,  3:59. 

437.     70. 
Self-styled,     R.  &  B.  3  :  413. 

576.     252. 
Self-sufficient.     R.  &  B.  3 : 1. 

415, 
Self-sunk,     Fifine,  4 :  416,     C.  720. 

221, 
Self-superiority.     Ari.   A.  5 :  160. 

a  652. 
Self-supplied,    Fifine,  4:397,     C. 

709.     282. 
Self-supremacy.     Paii.  1:7,     C.  5, 
Self-sustaining.     R.&B,  3: 9,    C 
418,     261. 

R,   &    B,    3:74,      C.  443. 

112. 
Self-sustaininent.      Fifine,   4 :  388. 

C.  705.     150. 
Self  -  transforming.       Bea.     Sig. 

6:413;  7:59.     C.  m>.     159, 
Self  -  vindicating.      Fifine,   4 :  393. 

C.  707. 
Selfish.     Pippa,  1:355.      C.  140. 
183. 

R.   &  B.  3:108.     C.  457. 

226. 
Selfsame.    R.&B.  3:  31.     C.  427. 

193- 
Semblance.    R.&B.  3:332.     C. 

545.     120. 
Aht    V.    4:184.      C.    383. 

96. 
Semitones.    R,  &  B.  3:109.     C. 

457,     276. 
Sense,     Pau.  1:16,     C.  8.     236. 

Para.  1 :  t)7,     C.  27,     36, 

R.  &  B.  3:387,     C.  566. 

165. 


465 


Sense 
Sense. 


INDEX 

C.  570. 
C.  650. 
C.  9G6. 
C.   966. 


Shades 


R.  &  B.  3:397, 

44- 
Ari.   A.    5 :  169. 

263. 
Fr.   Fu.    6:332. 

216. 
Fr.    Fu.    6:333. 

94- 

Fust,  () :  377.     C.  984.    224. 

Sense-free.      Inn   A.   5:  277.      C 

Sense  -  frighting.      Inn  A.  5 :  277. 

C.  lai. 
Senses.      Two    Poets,    6:  84.      C 
862.     37. 

Dan.  Bar.  6:309.     C.  958. 

45- 
Sensitive.     Fifine,  4:428.     C.  727. 
27. 

Ari.    A.    5:163.      C.    653. 

99. 
Sensitivest.     R.  &  B.  3:289.     C. 

529. 
Sensualest.     Para.  1:91.     C.  36. 
Sentence.      R.   &  B.   3:134.      C. 

467.     214. 
Sentry-station.     R.   &  B.  3:382. 

C.  564. 
Sequestered.    R.  &  B.  3:55.     C. 

435.     69. 
Serest.    St.  Mart.  5 :  351.     C.  814. 

131. 
Sergius.     Eas.-Day,  4 :  38.     C.  329. 
Sermon-serawlings.     Inn  A.  5 :  283. 

C.  789. 
Serpent.    R.  &  B.  3  :  371.    C.  559. 
277. 

La  S.  6 :  64.     C.  854.     179. 

La  S.  t) :  73.     C.  858.     211. 

Serpent-like.    R.&B.  3:179.     C. 
48(;. 

Fil.  Bald.  5 :  379.     C.  824. 

Serpent-solid.     Pietro,  6:172.     C 

901. 
Serpent  -  stair.      R.   &   B.  3:439. 
^  C.  587.     107. 
Serpent-queen.     Para.  1 :  106.     C. 

Serpentining.    Andrea,  4 :  83.     C. 

346. 
Ari.    A.    5:238.      C.    680. 

20. 
Serpentry.     R.  &  B.   3:470.     C. 

5!)!).     228. 
Servant.       R.    &   B.   3:187.      C. 

489.     177. 
R.    &    B.    3:380.     C,   563. 

12. 


466 


Servant.    Red  Cott.  5 :  61.    C.  759. 

233. 
Serve.     Para.  1 :  M.     C.  15.     30. 
King  C.   1 :  393.       C.    155. 

52- 
R.    &   B.   3:73.     C.   443. 

44- 
Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  325.     C.  964. 

157- 
Serves.    Straf .  1 :  142.    C.  55.    255. 
Service.     Para.  1 :  99.     C.  o\).    24. 

94- 
Two  Poets,  6 :  114.     C.  873. 

c.      .       ^37-       , 
Service-tabernacles.     Chris.  -  Eve, 

4 :  10.     C.  319. 
Service-tree.     Ger.  de   L.   6 :  349. 

C.  973. 
Serviceable.     How  it  S.  4 :  58.     C 

336.     245. 
Serving.     Pillar,   6:271.     C.  941. 

221. 
Serving-girl.     Ari.  A.  5 :  124.     C. 

638. 
Serving -man.      Red  Cott.   5:48. 

C  754.     10. 
Serving-people.     R.  &   B.   3:177. 

C.  485. 
Setebos.     Caliban,  4 :  207.     C.  392. 
Sets-to.     Sludge,  4 :  226.     C.  399. 
Setters-forth.    Sor.  1 :  194.     C.  75. 
Setting.      Soul's  Tr.   2:356.      C. 
297.     65. 

R.   &  B.  3:220.     C.  502. 

245. 
Settle-down.      Cleon,   4 :  115.      C. 

358. 
Settler's-implements.     Bishop  B. 

4 :  114.     C.  358. 
Settling-down.     Inn  A.  5:  302.    C. 

797. 
Seven-fold.    R.  &  B.  3:211.     C. 

498. 
Seven-stringed.     Two  Cam.  6 :  262. 

C.  938. 
Seven-times-ten.     R.  &  B.  3:363. 

C.  556. 
Seven -towered.     Ari.  A.   5:180. 

C.  (i60. 
Sforza's.      Red   Cott.   5 :  11.       C. 

740. 
Shabby-genteel.      Inn  A.  5:243. 

C.  773. 
Shade.     In  a  B.  4 :  139,     C.  367. 

Bean-St.    6:271.      C.   942. 

276. 
Shades.    R.  &  B.  3 :  469.     C  598. 

73- 


Shadow  INDEX 


Sliadow,    R.  &  B.  3 :  155.     C.  47G. 

98. 
R.  &  B.   3:276.      C.   524. 

104. 
R.  &   B.   3:333.      C.   545. 

247. 
Mar.  Rel.  6 :  124.     C.  877. 

40. 
Shag -rag.      Ari.   A.  5:149.      C. 

G48. 
Shagrag.      R.   &  B.   3:151.      C. 

474.     23. 
Shah's.    Sun,  6:  250.     C.  933.    64. 
Shake.      Fifine,   4:388.      C.   704. 

222 

Red  Cott.  5:10.     C.   740. 

87. 
Shakes.      Bishop    B.    4:95.      C. 

351.     16. 
Shakespeare.      Bishop   B.   4:103. 

C.  353.     5. 
Sham.     R.  &  B.  3:  435.     C.  585. 

144. 

Fifine,  4:  429.    C.  728.    202. 

Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  320.     C.  mi. 

222. 
Sham-ambassadors.  Ari.  A.  5 :  115. 

C.  (534. 
Sham-prophecy-retailer.     Ari.  A. 

5:101.     C.  629. 
Shame.     Love,  2:26.    C.  172,    91. 
A    Blot,    2:165.      C.    225. 

44- 

Luria,  2 :  376.     C.  305.    59. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  292.     C.  530.    8. 

R.  &   B.  3:338.      C.   547. 

158. 
R.   &  B.   3:376.     C.  5G1. 

267. 

La  S.  6 :  64.     C.  854.    245. 

Shame's.    A  Blot,  2: 165.     C.  225. 

no. 
Shamefaced.    R.  &  B.  3 :  108.     C. 

457.     128. 
Shamelessly-protested.      R.  &  B. 

3 :  127.     C.  464.     144. 
Shape.    R.  &  B.  3:50,      C.  434. 

96. 
Fr.    Fu.  6:329.       C.  965. 

185. 
Share.     Para.  1 :  34.     C.  15.     278. 

Sor.  1 :  254.     C.  99.     loi. 

R.   &   B.   3:431.      C.  583. 

39. 

Chris.-Eve,  4 :  27.     C.  325. 

Share-and-sh are-alike.     Prince  H. 

4 :  359.     C.  693. 
Sharp.    Sor.  1:203.     C.  79.     139- 


Shell-eztremity 
C.  343. 
C. 


Sharp.     Fra  Lippo,  4 :  76, 

239. 
Sharp-curled .    Old  Pict.  2 :  37 

17(i. 
Sharp-featured.     Red  Cott.  5 :  8. 

a  73<;. 

Sharp-i)iercing.     Agam.  6:5.     C. 

832. 
Sharp-toothed.      Waring,   2:272, 

C.  2(i5. 
Shatters.     Soul's  Tr.  2:346.     C. 

293.     28. 
Shaving -shears.      Holy-C.  2:  317, 

C.  281. 
Shaving-trick.     Inn  A.  5 :  302.    C. 

796, 
Shawl.    Porph.  2 :  329.     C.  2S6. 
She-dog.     Agam.  6:  37.     C.  844. 
She-dove.    R.  &B.3:102.    C.454. 
She-intelligence.    Nmnph.  5 :  350. 

C.  814. 
She-pard.     R.   &   B.   3:376.      C. 

561. 
She-shape.     Dan.  Bar.  6:  310.     C. 

958. 
Sheaf-ripe.      Ned   B.   6:143.      C. 

887, 
Sheath,     Stat,  &   B.  2:332.      C. 

284.     153. 
Sheep.    R.  &  B.  3 :  15.      C  420. 
281, 

Fifine,  4 :  384,     C.  702, 

Red  Cott,   5:90,      C,  770, 

142. 
Sheep-dealer,     Ari,  A,  5:152 


C. 
C. 

c. 
c. 
c. 


649. 
Sheep-face.     Red  Cott.  5 :  21. 

744. 
Sheep-like.     Colombe,  2 :  210, 
243. 

Ponte  A.  6 :  410 ;  7 :  53. 

995. 
Sheep -pens.      Pippa,   1:356. 

140. 
Sheep-range.     Flight,  2:289.     C. 

271. 
Sheep  -  sacrificer.     Balau.  4 :  27(). 

C.  (J07. 
Sheep's-wool.     R.  &  B.  3 :  422.     C. 

580. 
Sheepskin-clad.     Iv^n,  6 :  132.     C. 

881. 
Sheepskin-garb.     R.  &  B.  3:413. 

C.  57(i.     250. 
Shelf-occupants.  Two  Poets,  6 :  89. 

C.  8(>4. 
Shell-extremity.     Red  Cott,  5 :  14. 

C.  741. 


467 


Shell-outside 


Shell -outside.      Red  Cott.   5:4G. 

C.  754.     154. 
SheUey.     Meraor.  2  :  89.     C.  195, 
Sheiit.     Sor.  1 :  255.     C.  99. 
Shepherd.    R.   &  B.  3:413.      C. 

57().     252. 
Shepherd-king.     Para.   1 :  55.      C. 

23. 
Shepherd  -  pipes.      Luria,    2  :  369. 

a  302. 
Sherris-brewage.   At  the  M.  5 :  330. 

C.  808. 
Shield.    R.  &  B.  3:378.     C.  5G2. 

63. 
Shield-bearing.    Agam.  6 :  25.     C. 

839. 
Shift.    Prince  H.  4:340.     C.  685. 

66. 
Shilly-shally.    Red  Cott.  5 :  80.    C. 

7GG. 
Shimei,     R.  «&;  B.  3 :  187.     C.  489. 

90. 
Shiny.     R.    &   B.   3:24.     C.  424. 

224. 
Shiny-.souled.     Agam.   6 :  37.      C. 

844. 
Ship.      One     Word,    4:128.       C. 
363. 

Fifme,     4:419,        C.     722. 

212. 
Ship-carpentry.    R.  &  B.  3:284. 

C\  527,     186. 
Ship  -  money.     Straf .   1 :  136.      C. 

52. 
Ship-shape.    Bishop  B,  4:95,     C. 

350,  _ 
Ship  -  timber.     Two  Poets,  6 :  78. 

a  859. 
Ship-wood.    Two  Poets,  6 :  79.    C. 

860. 
Ship's -Hell.      Agam.   6:22.      C. 

838 

Shocks.    R.  &  B,  3 :  117,     C.  461. 

261. 
Shod.    R.  &  B.  3:302.     C.  534. 

130. 
Shoe.    R.   &  B.  3:144,     C.  471, 

87. 
R,   &  B,   3:199,      C.   493, 

133, 
R,   &   B,   3:437,      C,   586, 

22, 
Shoe-sole-shreds.    Ari,  A,  5 :  170. 

C.  656. 
Shoot.     R.   &  B.  3 :  132.     C.  467. 

39. 
Chris.-Eve,  4 :  19.     C.  322, 

145. 


INDEX  Shudders 

Fifine,    4:434.      C.    730. 

Agam.  6:8.      C. 

C. 


Shop. 

log. 
Shore  - bound. 

833. 
Shore-sand.     Mul^y.  6 :  163. 

897. 
Short  -  casting.      R.  &  B.  3:151. 

C.  474.     206. 
Shot-forth.     R,  &  B.  3:284.     C. 

527.      222. 

Shot-silk.     Red  Cott,  6:76,      C. 

765. 
Shoulder-blade.     Inn  A.  5:249. 
C.  776. 

Hal.   &    Hob,   6:129.      C. 

880.     220. 
Shouted.      Sor.    1:245.       C.    95. 

102. 
Shovelful.      Plot-C.    6:266.      C. 

940.     125. 
Shoving.      R.   &    B.   3:413.      C. 

576.     4. 
Shows.     Fr.    Fu.  6:337,     C.  968, 

164. 
Shrank.    R.  &  B.  3 :  167.     C.  480. 

40. 
Shrew-mouse.     Para.  1 :  111.      C. 

44. 
Shrewd.     Geo.  B.  D.  6:. 322.     C. 

962.     135. 
Shriek  -  shriek.     Chris.-Eve,  4 :  6. 

C.  318. 
Shrill  -  shrieking.      Agam.    6 :  35. 

C.  843. 
Shrine.    R.  &  B.  3:371.     C.  559. 

156. 
Shrine-box.    R.  &  B.  3 :  416.     C. 

577. 
Shi-inking-back.     Para.  1 :  80.     C 

32. 
Shrivels.    J.  Lee,  4: 155.     C.  373. 

105. 
Shrouds.    R.  &B.  3:31.     C.  426. 

2. 
Shrub  -  embossment.      Red   Cott. 

5 :  17.     C.  742. 
Shrub-house.     Pippa,  1 :  328.      C. 

129. 
Shrub  -  imbedded.       Prince    H. 

4:375.     C.  699. 
Shrunk-shanked.    R.  &  B.  3 :  407. 

C  573 
Shrunk -up.     Balau.   4:307.      C. 

619. 
Shudder.    Two  Poets,  6:79.    C. 

860.     250. 
Shudders.     R.   &  B.  3:389.      C. 

566.    35- 


468 


Shushan's  INDEX 

Joch.  6:230.     C.  92(J. 
C.   738. 


Shushan's 

8i. 
Shut.     Red  Cott.   5:6, 

226. 
Shuttle-work.    Inn  A.  5 :  246.     C. 

77.->. 
Shyly  -  sheathed.      Fifine,   4 :  385. 

C.  702. 
Sib.    R.  &B.  3:44.     C.431. 
Sick.     Sor.  1  :  271.     C.  105.     258. 
Sickly.     Red  Cott.  5 :  70.     C.  762. 

.73- 
Sickly-sensitive.     Fr.   Fu.  6 :  330. 

C.  'J(i5. 
Side.     Para.  1:111.     C.  44.     191. 

Boy  &  Ang.  2 :  241.     C.  254. 

92. 

R.    &   B.   3:126.      C.  464. 

283. 

Ari.    A.    5:146.      C.    647. 

200. 
Side -bars.      Flight,    2:297.      C. 

274. 
Sideboards.      Sludge,   4:224.      C. 

398.     28. 
Sidlingly.     Red  Cott.   5:19.      C. 

743. 
Siena's.     Paech.  5 :  324.     C.  804. 
Sift.      R.    &  B.   3:21.      C.  423. 

269. 
Sigh.     Para.  1:55.     (7.23.     51. 

Pippa,  1 :  335.     C.  132.    3. 

R.    &   B.  3:344.      C.   549. 

268. 

J.  Lee,  4 :  159.     C.  374. 

Two  Poets,  6 :  103.     C.  869. 

227. 
Sight.      Druses,  2:125.      C.  208. 
226. 

R.   &  B.  3:384.     C.  564. 

20. 

Red  Cott.   5:20.      C.   744. 

69. 

Forgiv.     5:364.       C.     819. 

219. 

Pillar.  6:  269.     C.  941.     9. 

Fr.  Fu.  6 :  333.    C.  9(J6.   34. 

Sight-see.     R.   &  B.  3:243.     C. 

511. 
Sight-seeing.    R.  &  B.  3:  242.     C. 

511. 
Sights 

56. 
Sign-mark.    Sor.  1 :  270.     C.  105. 
Signal-lamp.    A  Blot,  2:164.     C, 

224. 
Signal  -  streak.     R.   &   B.   3 :  95, 


ChildeR.2:333.     C.  287. 


C.  452 


Silver-clear 

C. 
C. 


Signet-impress.     Agara.6:20. 

»37. 
Signet-ring.     Inn   A.   5 :  2<J7. 

7«;j.  _ 

Signorini,    Beatrice.       Bea.    Sig. 

6:413;  7:5.».     C.  997. 
Silence,     (ior.dola,  2 :  267.     C.  26.3, 

201. 
R.   &  B.  3:215. 

168. 
R.   &   B.   3:269. 

•  R.   &  B.  3:328. 

121. 
Artemis,    4 :  63. 

12. 
Abt    V.    4:185. 

60. 
Chas.   A.   6:364. 

173.       ^ 
Names.     C.  947 


C.  500. 

C.  521. 

C.  543. 

C.  338. 

C.  382. 

C.  978. 


221. 


SUent.     By  Fire.   2:62.      C.  186. 

187. 
Soul's  Tr.  2:346.     C.  293. 

224. 
Two  Poets,  6 :  103.     C.  869. 

Silentness.      Ari.   A.   5:100.      C. 

628.     230. 
Silk.      Ari.    A.  5:136.      C.  642. 

139- 
SUk-slight.     A  Blot,  2:162.     C. 

224.     112. 
Silk-soft.    Joch.   6:211.      C.  918. 

lOI. 

Silk-walled.    Epil.  Eagle,  6:241. 

C.  930.    223. 
Silk-winding.    Pippa,  1:328.      C. 

129. 
Pippa,    1  :  363.      C.    143. 

78. 
Silken-couched.    R.  &  B.  3:346. 

C.  550.     151. 
SillUy.     DisAl.  4:173.     C.  379. 
SiUy-sooth.    R.    &   B.  3:86.      C. 

448.     108. 
R.  «fe  B.  3:431.     C.  583. 

124. 
Silver.     Her.    Trag.  2:315.      C. 

281.     81. 
Gold    H.  4:166.      C.  377. 

70. 
Silver -blazing.     Sor.  1:287.      C. 


112. 


Silver -bright.      Pan,   6:188. 

<K)9.     269. 
Silver-clear.      Fifine,   4 :  414. 

719. 
469 


Silver-flo'w 


Silver-flow.     Ari.  A.  5:190.      C. 

601. 
Silver  -  gray.      Englishm.    2 :  260. 

C.  2(il. 
Silver-mouth.     Druses,  2 :  104.    C. 

200. 
Silver-pointed.     One  Word,  4 :  124. 

C.  362. 
Silver  -  purchased.     Agam.   6:28. 

C.  .S41. 
Silver-sided.      Agam.    6:  47.      C. 

«47. 
Silver -smitten.     Bean-St.  6:273. 

C.  it42. 
Silver-soft.     Red  Cott.  5 :  64.     C. 

760.     1 86. 
SUver-sphere.    R.  &B,  3:87.     C. 

448. 
SUver-sweet.      Fifine,   4 :  414.     C 

719. 
Silver-threaded.     Para.  1:28.     C. 

13. 
Silver-true.     Prince  H.  4 :  338.     C. 

684. 
SUver-white.      Joch.   6:211.      C. 

918.     lOi. 
SUverly.     R.  &  B.  3:  97.     C.  452. 

97- 

Prince  H.  4 :  356.     C.  692. 

Simeon.      Two  Poets,   6: 87.      C. 

863.     13. 
Similarity.     Soul's  Tr.  2 :  355.     C. 

297.     3- 
Simple.      Pippa,   1 :  S17.     C.   137. 

280. 
R.   &  B.  3:431.      C.  583. 

244. 
J.    Lee,   4  :  160.       C.   375. 

281. 
Ben   K.   6  :  386.       C.   372. 

229. 
Simple  -  hearted.      Druses,   2  :  24. 

C.  208. 
Simple-strait.    R.  &B.3:162.    C. 

478. 
Simple -sweet.    Pretty  W.  2:78. 

C.  191. 
R.   &  B.   3  :  86.      C.  448. 

108. 
Simple-witted.    Fr.  Fu.6:334.    C. 

i)67. 
Simplicity.      Italian,   2 :  254.      C. 

259.     70. 
Red  Cott.  5:22.      C.  744. 

61. 
Simulation.      Inn  A.   5 :  286.     C 

790.     106. 
Sin.    Sor.  1 :  202.     C.  78.    39. 


INDEX  Sinned 

Sin.      A   Blot,   2 :  154.     C.    220. 

199. 
R.   A:    B.  3  :  80.      C.  445. 

R.   <fe  B,  3:311.     C.  537. 

285. 
R.    &    B.   3:337.      C.  547. 

224. 
R.   6c   B.  3:365.      C.  557. 

220. 
R.   &  B.  3:470.      C.  598. 

232. 
Epil.  Fif.  4:443.     C.  735. 

112. 
Red    Cott.   5:72.     C.   763. 

94- 
Inn    A.    5  :  296.       C.    794. 

114. 
Sin -scathed.      Tray,  6:142.      C. 

887. 
Sin's.      Inn  A.    5:284.      C.     789. 

37. 
Sins.     Straf .  1 :  147.     C.  56.     109. 
R.  &  B.   3:  £6.      C.   448. 

37- 
Ber.  de  M.  6  :  295.     C.  952. 


77- 
Sinai  -  forehead's.       One    Word, 

4  :  126.     C.  3(32. 
Sincere.       Straf.   1:142.      C.   54. 
104. 

Soul's  Tr.  2 :  352,     C.  295. 

198. 
Sinful.    Para.  1:98.     C.39.    206. 
Sing.      Ari.   A.   5 :  104.      C.  630. 

119. 
Sings.      Home-T.  A.  2  :  46.      C. 

179.     253. 
Singed.     R.  &  B.  3:31.     C.  426. 

12. 
Singing-birds.    R.&B.3:162.    C. 

479.     251. 
Singing-dress.     Chris.  Sm.  6 :  314. 

C.  fXJO. 
Singles.      Camel  -  D.   6:259.      C. 

937.     151. 
Singled.    Bean-St.  6 :  276.    C.944. 

67. 
Sinistrous.     Red  Cott.  5:24.     C. 

745. 
Sink.     Pan.  1 :  25.     C.  11.     283. 

R.   &  B.  3:397.     C.   570. 

78. 
Sinned.     Para.  1 :  114.     C.  45.    6. 
A  Blot,  2:152.      C.  220. 

245- 
R.   &  B.  3 :  273.     C.  523. 


470 


1 


Sinner  INDEX 

B.  3:138.     C.  409 


Sinner.    R. 

221 

-^■; Fifiiie',4:442.    C.  735.    212. 

Sinner-saints.    Ned  B.  6:151.     C 

H!)2. 
Siora.     Gondola,  2:  269.     C.  264. 
Sip.      R.   &   B.   3:143.      C.  471. 

104. 
Sire -found.      Baku.   4:282.      C. 

(ilO. 
Sister.    A  Blot,   2:101.     C.  223. 

24. 
Sister-element.    Red   Cott.   5 :  50. 

C.  755. 
Sister-fames.     R.  &  B.  3 :  469.     C. 

598.     68. 
Sister-palms.     Sor.  1 :  202.     C.  78. 
Sister -sense.     Balau.  4:271.     C. 

605. 
Sister-turned-mother.    Chris.-Eve, 

4:2.     C.  316. 
Sitara.     Pillar,  6:  270.     C.  941. 
Sits.     R.  &  B.  3:  432.     C.  584. 

35. 

Six-feet-high.     Fil.   Bald.  5:383. 

C.  826. 
Six-legged.    Fifine,4:384.    C.  702. 
Sixty-and-under.    R.  &  B.  3:  72. 

(J.  442. 
'Sixty,  Anno  Domini.     Prince  H. 

4 :  342.     C.  08(). 
'Sixty-eight.    Red  Cott.  5:  54.    C. 

756. 
Skein.    Master  H.  2 :  94.     C.  196. 

Skill-less.      R.  &  B.  3:409.      C. 

574. 
Skin.     R.    &   B.   3:29.      C.   426. 

136. 
Skin-colored.    Ari.  A.  5 :  164.     C 

654. 
Skin-deep.     Sor.  1 :  231.     C.  90. 
Skin-flint.      Ari.   A.   5:121.     C. 

637. 
Skin  -  surface.     Red  Cott.  5 :  94. 

C.  ITl. 
Skinker.     Fust.  6 :  369.     C.  980. 
Skirt -fold.     Mul^y.  6:166.      C. 

898. 
Skirts.     Inn  A.   5:243.     C.   773. 

238. 
Skiill-and-cross-bones-banner.    R. 

&B.  3:30.     C.  426. 
Skull-like.    ChUde  R.  2:330.     C. 

287. 
Sky.     Before,  2: 86.    C.193.    136 


Sledging-cap 
C.  319. 


Sky.    Chris.-Eve,   4:9, 
165. 

Abt    V.   4 :  1S4.       C.   383. 

181. 

Two  Poets,  6:  77.     C.  859. 

239- 
Sky-high.     Inn  A.  5 :  304.     C.  797. 
Sky- like.     Sor.    1:307.     C.   120. 

274. 
Sky  -  regions.      Agam.   6:6.      C. 

832. 
Sky -scud.     Ari.  A.  5:120.      C. 

()3(). 
Sky-ward.    Sor.  1:311.     C.  121. 
Skies.     Chris.-Eve,  4:7.     C.  318. 

93. 
Skyey.     Ber.  de  M.  6:301.     C. 

954.     59. 
Slab-stepped.     Fr.  Fii.  6 :  3130.     G. 

9(i5. 
Slab-stone.    Chas.   A.  6 :  358.     C 

976. 
Slack-strung.     Ger.  de  L.  6 :  343. 

C.  972. 
Slain.     R.   &  B.  3:;?05.     C.  535. 

31. 
Slammed.     Sor.    1:259.      C.  100. 

279. 
Slanders.     R.  &  B.  3  :  47.     C.  433. 

215. 
Slapping-dance.      Ari.   A.    5 :  239. 

C.  (JHO. 
Slaughter  -  house.      Para.   1 :  107. 

C.  42. 
Slaughter -rage.     Ari.   A.   5:209. 

C.  (i70. 
Slaughter-weapons.      Sor.   1  :  200. 

C.  77. 
Slave.      Adam,   6 :  207.      C.   916. 

125. 
Slave-maids.      Agam.   6 :  27.      C 

840. 
Slave-prize.     Ari.   A.  5 :  236.     C. 

(579. 
Slave-sorrows.     Two  Poets,  6 :  112. 

C.  873.     243. 
Slaves.     Holy-C.   2:319.     C.  282. 

64. 
Geo.  B.  D.  6  :  321.     C.  962. 

239. 
Slaves'-tribute.     Phei.  6  :  125.     C. 

878, 
Slaver.     R.  &  B.  3 :  222.     C.  503. 

C.  507. 


170. 
R.    &   B.   3:232. 
139. 


R.   &  B.  3:324.     C.  542.    Sledging-cap.     Lovers'  Q.  2:29. 
213.  I     C.  ltd. 

471 


Sleek-cheeked 


INDEX 


Smile 


Sleek-cheeked.      R.    &   B,   3:73. 

C.  443. 
Sleek-wet.     Caliban,   4:208.      C- 

Sleep.     Para.  1 :  84.     C.  34.     258. 

Woman's,    2:22.      C.   171. 

38. 
Any  Wife,  2:71.     C.  189. 

Stat.  &  B.  2 :  324.     C.  284. 

206. 

Plot-C.    6:267.      C.    940. 

159- 

Bean -St.   6:274.      C.  943. 

255. 

Rosny,    6:  391  ;    7  :  5.       C. 

98?.     49. 
Sleei)-burdened.    Agam.  6  :  11.    C. 

834. 
Sleep- stuff.      Clive,   6:157.      C. 

894. 
Sleep  -  time.       Epil.    A.    6  :  440  ; 

7:113.     C.  1007.     160. 
Sleep's.     Bean-St.  6 :  273.     C.  943. 

203. 
Sleeps.     Para.  1:98.     C.  39.     206. 

Red   Cott.   5  :  14.      C.  741. 

216. 
Slept.      Pippa,    1:349.      C.    138. 

21. 
Slidden.     Death  in  D.  4 :  195.     C. 

387. 
Slidders.      R.    &    B.  3:232.     C. 

507. 
SUde.    R.  &  B.  3:231.     C.  507. 

53- 
Slide -bolt.      Pippa,    1:332.      C. 

131. 
Slight.      Sor.     1:315.       C.     123. 
255. 

Luria,     2 :  382.       C.     307. 

29. 
Slimy-like.     R.   &  B.  3:409.     C. 

574. 
Slimy-smooth.    R.&B.3:232.  C. 

.507. 
Slingsby.    Straf .  1 :  169.     C.  65. 
SUp.       Pippa,     1:328.       C.     129. 
254. 

At  the  M.  5 :  333.     C.  808. 

28. 
Slip -fetter.     Druses,  2 :  134.     C. 


212 
Slips. 

,97- 
Slit  -  eared 

897. 
Sloe-tree's.    La  S.  6 :  54, 


J.   Lee,   4:162.      C.   375. 

Mul^y.  6:164.      C. 

C.  849. 


Slope  -  side.     R.  &  B.  3:1.    C. 

414. 
Sloth.      Flight,  2:304.      C.    277. 

4- 
Slow.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  339.    C.  290. 

182. 
Lnria,     2:400.       C.     314. 

T  ^73- 
Luria,     2:402.        C.     31.5. 

173- 

R.   &   B.   3:106.      C.  456. 

130. 

La  S.  6 :  67.     C.  855.    273. 

Family,    6:248.       C.    932. 

112. 
Slow-stored.    Ari.  A.  5 :  165.     C. 

654. 
Slow  -  thickening.       Ger.    de    L. 

6:3.52.     C.  974. 
Slow  -  wandering.      Ivkn,    6  :  132. 

C  881 
Slowlier."     Inn  A.  5 :  276.     C.  786. 

236. 
Sludge.    Sludge,  4  :  227.     C.  399. 
Slumber.    Inn  A.  5 :  284.     C.  789. 

T  37- 

La  S.  6 :  75.     C.  859.     159. 

Slur.    R.    &  B.   3:438.      C.  58(;. 


R.&B.  3:367.     C. 
6. 


C.  oi 


580. 


227. 
Slush-worm 

558. 
Sly.    Sor.  1:199.     C.  77 

R.   &  B.  3:423. 

288. 

Ari.    A.    5:168.      C.    655. 

192. 
SmaU.      Sor.    1:318.       C.     124. 
236. 

Sor.  1 :  .320.     C.  125.     5. 

Small-craft.     Two  Poets,   6:111. 

C.  872. 
Smart-place.    Ari.  A.  5 :  103.     C. 

630. 
Smarting-whUe.    Colombe,  2  :  212. 

C.  243. 
Smatch.    R.&B.  3:232.    C.  507. 
139. 

Numph.  5 :  350.     C.  814. 

Smell-feasts.    R.  &  B.  3 :  280.     C. 

525.     39. 
Smelting-process.    R.&B.  3:  302. 

C.  568. 
SmUe.     Pau.  1 :  24.     C.  11.     237. 

Sor.  1 :  266.     C.  103.     162. 

R.    &    B.  3:27.      C.  425. 

153- 
R.    &    B.   3:. 32.      C.  427. 


252. 


472 


Smile 


INDEX 

C.  441. 


Smile.     R.  &   B.  3:68. 
182. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  198.     C.  493. 

R.   &  B.  3:211.     C.  498. 

44- 

R.   &  B.  3:333.     C.  545. 

17- 
In    ca    B.   4:140.      C.   3G7. 

240. 
Fifine,     4:388.        C.     704. 

222 

Red  Cott.  5 :  17.     C.   743. 

278. 
Inn    A.    5:268.      C.    783. 

Niimph.    5:348.       C.    813. 

187. 
Niimph.    5:350.       C.    814. 

181. 
Numph.    5:351.       C.    814. 

246. 
Fil.  Bald.  5 :  384.     C.  826. 

256. 
Two  Poets,  6  :  77.     C.  859. 

Two  Poets,  6 :  100.     C.  868. 

85. 

Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  320.     C.  962. 

2. 
Smile -like.      Forgiv.   5:362.      C 

818.     167. 
Smiles.     Pan.  1 :  13.     C.  7.     164. 

R.  &  B.  3:396.      C.   569. 

42. 

Joh.  Agri.  4 :  71.      C.  341. 

93. 
Smiled.     R.    &    B.    3:198.      C. 

493. 
Smirch.    Bad  D.  HI.  6 :  398  ;  7 :  22. 

C.  990.     183. 
Smirk.     R.&B.  3:189.     C.  489. 

222 

Smites.    R.  &  B.  3:25.     C.  424. 

ass- 
Smithcraft.     R.   &   B.  3:11.     C. 

419.     232. 
Smoke.    R.&B.  3:189.     C.  489. 

182. 
Smoke-grimed.    Agam.6:24.     C 

839._ 
Smoking-room.      Inn  A.   5:251. 

C.  Til.     227. 
Smooth-cheeked.    In  a  B.  4: 143. 

C.  369. 
Smooth-chinned.      Inn  A.  5 :  260. 

C.  780.     180. 
Smooth-mannered.    R.  &  B.  3 :  73. 

C.  443. 


Snov7-nionth 
A.   5:  171. 


Smooth-sleeked.    Ar 

C.  657. 
Smoothens.     R.    &   B.   3:27.     C. 

425.     128. 
Smouch,  Gypsy.     Ned  B.  6:  145. 

C.  889. 
Smut.      Sludge,   4:233.      C.   402. 

97- 
Snack.     Fifine,  4 :  407,     C.  715. 
Snail-paces.    A  Blot,  2:  150.      C. 

219. 
Snake.     R.  &  B.  3:  232.     C.  507. 

R.   &  B.  3:352.     C.  552. 

152. 

J.    Lee,    4:1.'55.      C.    373. 

274. 

Inn    A.    5:313.       C.    801. 

43. 

Cenciaja,   5:373.      C.   822. 

159. 
Snake-like.    Sor.  1:268.     C.  104. 

190. 
Snake-plants.     Bad  D.  III.  6 :  398 ; 

7 :  22.     C.  990. 
Snake-roots.    Ned  B.  6:147.     C. 

890. 
Snake-scale.     Ari.  A.  5 :  118.     C. 

635. 
Snake's.     Doctor,  6 :  185.     C.  908. 

154. 
Snap.     R.   &  B.  3:96.      C.  452. 

28. 
Snapped-up.    R.  &  B.  3:  322.     C. 

541.     33. 
Snatch -grace.      Carael-D.   6:259. 

C.  937. 
Sneer.     R.  &  B.  3:267.     C.  520. 

158. 
Sneers.     Pan.  1 :  13.     C.  7.     164. 
Sniggering.     Sludge,   4 :  256.      C 

412. 
Snore.    Red  Cott.   5:4.     C.   738. 

201. 
Snow.    R.   &  B.   3:12.     C.   419. 
80. 

R.   &  B.  3:449.     C.  591. 

109. 

Iv.\n.  6 :  133.     C.  882.     187. 

Snow-deposit.     Inn  A.  5:281.     C. 


788. 


Snow-flake.    Chas.  A.  6 :  354. 

974. 
Snow-goose.    Colomhe,  2: 185. 

232.     247. 
Snow  -  light.      Iv^n,    6 :  133. 

882. 
Snow -month.       Sor.    1:241. 

93. 
473 


Snow-Pnux 

Ari.   A. 


INDEX 

101.    c. 


Snow-Pnux 

(529. 
Snow  -  pure.      Pippa,   1 :  330.      C. 

i;«). 
Snow  -  soft.     Fifine,    4 :  414.      C. 

719. 
Snow-storm.     Two  Poets,   6:81. 

C.  «<W.     241. 
Snow -stupefied.      Inn  A.   5:306. 

C.  798. 
Snow-swathe.     Druses,  2:  111.    C. 

203. 
Snow-swathed.       Pau.   1 :  23.      C. 

10. 
Snow-white.    R.  &  B.  3:69.     C. 
441.     70. 

R.    &  B.    3 :  193.     C.   491. 

232. 
Snow-whitened.     Ivkn,  6 :  131.    C. 

881. 
Snuff.    R.  &  B.  3:  124.     C.  463. 
Snuffs,    R.&B.  3:442.     C.  588. 

265. 
Snuffbox  -  fanciers.       Eas.  -  Day, 

4 :  .35.     C.  328. 
Snuffle.     Chris.-Eve,  4:5.     C.  317. 

38- 
Snug-cornered.     Cenciaja,  5 :  370. 

C.  822. 
So-assisted.    Joch.  6  :  215.     C.  919. 
So-called.     Two  Poets,  6 :  97.     C 

8<i7.     214. 
So-despised.     Para.  1 :  99.     C.  40. 
So-heavy.      Para.    1:83.      C.    34. 

28. 
So-hoarded.     Para.  1 :  59.     C.  24. 
So-styled.     R.  &  B.  3:  5.     C.  416. 
183. 

R.    &   B.   3:126.     C.   464. 

121. 
Soaken.      Don.   6  :  198.      C.   913. 

132. 
Soapsuds.     R.   &  B.  3:43.      C. 

431.    25. 
Soar.    8or.  1:205.     C.  79.     117. 

R.  &  B.  3  :  124.      C.  463. 

136. 

R.   &  B.  3:210.     C.  498. 

48. 

La  .S.  6  :  61.     C.  852. 

Soaring  -  room.      Specul.   6  :  394  ; 

7 :  13.     C.  988.     10. 
Sober.     R.  &  B.   3 :  25.      C.   424. 
36. 

St.   Mart.   5:353.     C.  815. 

123. 
Sobriety.     Chris.  Sm.  6 :  314,     C. 

959.     268. 


Soldier's-name 

Fifine,   4:1385.     C.   70;5, 


Society. 

163. 
Society's.     R.   &   B.  3:162.      C. 

479.     225. 
Socket-edge.     R.  &  B.  3 :  401.     C. 

571.     137. 
Socratize.      Ari.    A.   5  :  235,      C. 

679, 
Sofa -lap.     Dubiety,   6:391;  7:6, 

C.  987.     151, 
Soffit,     Pietro,  6: 171,     C.  900, 
Soft,     R.  &  B.  3:392.      C.  568. 

34- 
R.    &   B.   3:433.     C.   584. 

197. 
Soft-bearded.     R.   &   B.   3:32L 


lun  A.  5:268.  C, 
.  R.  &  B.  3:22. 
345.  C. 
C. 


C.  541. 
Soft  -  closed. 

783.     56. 
Soft-ciLshioned 

C.  423. 
Soft-rinded.      Pippa,    1 

136. 
Soft-speeched.     R.  &  B.  3 :  73 

443. 
Softened.      Incident,    2:232.      C. 
251.     80. 

R.   &    B.   3:245.     C.   512. 

136. 
Softlier.     Fears,  5 :  .345.     C.  811. 

57. 
SoU's.     ChUdeR.  2:.3.34.     C.  288, 
Sokrates.     Balau.  4  :  270.     C.  605. 

Ari.  A.  5 :  127,     C.  639. 

Solace.     Para.  1:64,     C.26.     172. 

Any  Wife,  2 :  69.     C.  188. 

243. 

La  S.  6  :  67,     C.  8.55.     273. 

Sun,  6 :  251.     C.  934.     241. 

Soldier.    Joch.  6: 213.     C.919.    7. 
Soldier-bee.     R.&B.  3:187,     C. 

489.     136. 
Soldier-crab.     R.  &  B.  3 :  367,     C. 


i5K. 


A  Blot,  2:159. 
Camel-D,  6:257. 


Soldier-fashion. 

0.223. 
Soldier  -  guide. 

C.  9:36. 
Soldier-saint.    R.&B. 3: 277,     C. 

,524.     150. 
Soldier-service.     Dan.  Bar.  6 :  308. 

C.  957. 
Soldier -sprite.     Sor.    1:263.      C. 

102. 
Soldier's.       Last  R.   2:280,      C. 

268.     80. 
Soldier's  -  name.      Luria,   2  :  374, 

C,  304. 


474 


Soldiers 


INDEX 

a 


SorroTv-proof 


Soldiers.     Epil.    Fer.  6:283. 

\m.   35. 

Sole-begotten.     Agam.   G :  2(5.     C. 

840. 
Solemn.    R.  &  B.  3 :  366.     C.  5r.7. 

212. 
Solid.    Sludge,  4 :  239.    0.40.5.  27. 

Fr.   Fu.   6  :  339.       C.   969. 

238. 
Solid-looking.     Fifine,  4  :  438.     C. 

733. 
Solid-seeming.    Fifine,  4:411.     C. 

717. 
Solidity.      Bean -St.   6:277.      C. 

944.     74. 
Solitude.     Balau.  4  :  270.     C.  605. 
168. 

Epil.   Plot  -  C.   6 :  267.      C. 

940.     159. 
Solomon.     R.   &  B.  3:281.     C. 
526.     34. 

R.   &   B.   3  :  292.  '  C.  530. 

199. 
Solomon's.    Bad  D,  IV.  6:399; 

7  :  24.     C.  990. 
Sorae-title-or-other's.       R.   &    B. 

3 :  408.     C.  574. 
Somehow-anyhow.  R.  &B.3:410. 

C.  575. 
Somehow-nohow.      Fifine,   4 :  425. 

C.  726. 
Something-or-other.    R.  &  B.  3 :  6. 

C.  416. 
Somnolency.      Prince    H.   4  :  358. 

C.  692. 
Son.     R.&B.3:420.    0.579.    73. 
Two  Poets,  6 :  78.     C.  859. 

235- 
Son-servant.    R.  &  B.  3 :  445.     C. 

589. 
Song.    Sor.  1 :  236.     C.  92.     2. 

Waring,  2  :  273.       C.  265. 

18. 

R.  &B.  3:32.     0.427.    92. 

One  Word,  4  :  129.     C.  363. 

289. 
Song-flash.      An.   A.   5:136.      C. 

642. 
Song-inwoven.     Pan.  1 :  11.     C  6. 
Song-remedy.      Agam.   6:4.      C. 

831. 
Song-soil.    Toiich,  6  :  191.     C.  910. 

210. 
Song-spell.    Agam.  6 :  44.     C.  84(5. 
Song-sprouts.      Joch.   6 :  225.      C. 

2J5.     924. 
Song  -  suasion.     Agam.   6:6.     C. 

832. 


Song-time.     Joch.  6 :  226.     C.  924. 

128. 
Songs.    Sor.  1 :  233.     C.  90.     104. 
Son'jTstress-siren.    Ari.   A.  5:  110. 

C.  632. 
Sonnet -book.      R.    &   B.   3:347. 

C.  550. 
Sonnet  -  key.      House,  5 :  3.36.     C 

808,     105. 
Sonnet-stave.    R.  &B.  3:60.     C. 

438. 
Sonnet's.     Two  Poets,   6:93.     C. 

865.     200. 
Sonnets.      Two  Poets,  6:83.      C. 
8()1.     189. 

Two  Poets,  6:  99.     C.  8(J8. 

270. 
Sonneteers.     R.   &   B.    3:24.     C 

424. 
Sonneteering.     Two  Poets,  6: 110. 

C.  872. 
Soon  -  disheartened.       R.    &    B. 

3:326.     C.  542.     244. 
Soot-stuff.     Geo.  B.  D.  (i :  320.     C. 
,  9()2. 
Sophist  -  brood.      Ari.   A.   5 :  147. 

C.  ()47. 
Sophist  -  hating.      Ari.   A.  5 :  177. 

C.  659. 
Sophroniskos'.    Ari.  A.  5:135.    C. 

642. 
Sops-in-wine.    R.  &  B.  3 :  171.     C 

Sordello    Prince    Visconti.       Sor. 

1 :  325.     C.  127. 
Sore.    Ber.deM.  6:297.     C.  953. 

231. 
Sore-pressed.     Ari.  A.  5:200.     C. 

(i67. 
Soreliest.     Soul's   Tr.   2 :  356.     C. 

297.     225. 
Sorrel-sour.    Joch.  6:229.     C.'926. 

267. 
Sorrow.     Pau.  1:3.     C.  3.     25. 

Para.  1 :  49.     C.  21.     260. 

Fhght,  2 :  309.    C.  278.    122. 

R.   &   B.  3:258.     C.  517. 

204. 
R.  &  B.  3:»;2.      C.  556. 

"5- 
Ari.    A.    5:99.       C.    628. 

Two  Poets,  6:  112.     C.  873. 

84. 
Sorrow -like.      R.    &    B.   3:244. 


C.  511. 
Sorrow-proof. 
40.     82. 
475 


Para.   1 :  101. 


Sorrcw-smitten 


Sorrow-smitten.    Ger.  de  L.  6 :  343. 

C.  1I7(X 
Sorrow-sunk.     R.  &  B.  3 :  122.    C. 

4«2.     113. 
Sorrows.     Joch.   0:230.      C.  920. 

Sort-of-w  hat-one-might-name.     R. 

&  6.3:430.     C.  583. 
Sorted-o'er.    Sor.  1 :  232.     C.  90. 
Soul.     Pau.  1 :  9.     C.  5.     206. 

Pau.  1 :  12.     C.  6.     250. 

Pau.  1 : 1.5.     C.  7.     64. 

Pau.  1:16.     C.  8.     236. 

Pau.  1 :  25.     C.  11.     283. 

■ Para.  1 :  77.     C.  31.     21 . 

Para.  1 :  101.     C.  40.     47. 

Sor.  1 :  224.     C.  87.     81. 

Sor.  1 :  297.     C.  115.     252. 

Sor.  1 :  298.     C.  116.     24. 

Sor.  1 :  318.     C.  124.     157. 

Sor.  1 :  320.     C.  125.     5. 

Pippa,  1 :  349.     C.  138.     21 . 

Crist.  2:16.     C.  170.     162. 

Old    Pict.   2:41.      C.   177. 

95.     284. 

Saul,  2 :  .52.     C.  181 ,     136. 

Saul,  2 :  5().     C.  183.     241. 

Star,  2 :  59.     C.  185.     238. 

Two   in  C.  2:72.     C.   189. 

266. 
Flight,     2 :  304.        C.     277. 

47- 
Soul's  Tr.  2:343.     C.  291. 

260. 
Luria,      2:392.        C.     311. 

206. 
R.    &   B.  3:13.      C.  419. 

R.    &    B.    3:65.      C.   440. 

37- 
• R.    &    B.   3:68.      C.  441. 

197- 
R.   &  B,  3:103.     C.  4.35. 

25- 
R.   &  B.  3:115.     C.  459. 

253. 
R.   &  B.  3:140.      C.  470. 

289. 
R.   &  B.  3:155.      C.  476. 

243. 
R.   &  B.  3:201,     C.  494. 

258. 
R.   &   B.  3  :  258.     C.  517. 

163. 
R.   &  B.  3:269.      C.  521. 

65. 

R.   &  B.  3:271.     C.   522. 

114. 


INDEX 

Soul. 


R.   &  B.  3:277. 

259. 
R.   &  B.  3:310. 

240. 
R.   &  B.  3:361. 

280. 
R.   &  B.  3:378. 

81. 
R.   &  B.   3:385. 

252. 
R.   &   B.  3:. 399. 

160. 
R.   &  B.   3:403. 

239- 
R.   &  B.  3:407. 

283. 
R.   &  B.  3:414. 

162. 
R.   &  B.  3:426. 

81. 
R.   &  B.  3:433. 

28. 
R.   &  B.   3:470. 

224. 

-  Chris. -Eve,  4 :  30. 

118. 

•  Fra  Lippo,  4 :  78. 

15.     21.     179. 

•  Andrea,     4 :  85. 

56. 
■  Cleon,     4 :  122. 

123. 
-In    a   B.   4:146, 

226. 
-J.    Lee,    4:164. 

146. 
■Gold    H.  4:165, 

276. 
-Ben  Ezra,  4:186. 

21. 

-  Ben  Ezra,  4 :  187, 

81. 

-  Ben  Ezra,  4 :  188. 

^^54- 

-  Ben  Ezra,  4 :  190. 

246. 
-Death  in  D.4:202, 
^53. 

-  Prospice,   4  :  216. 
^34- 

-Balau,    4:296. 

21. 
-Prince  H.  4:378. 

249. 

-  Fifine,     4 :  .396. 

-  Fifine,     4 :  399. 

69. 


Soul 

C.  524. 

C.  537. 

C.  5,55. 

C,  562. 

C,  565. 

C.  571. 

C,  572, 

C.  574. 

C.  576, 

C.  581, 

C.  584. 

C.  598. 

a   326. 

C.  344. 
C.  346. 
C.     301. 

C.  370. 

C.    376. 

C.   377. 

C.  384. 

C.  384, 

C.  384, 

C.  385. 
C.390. 

C.  395. 
C.     615. 

C  700. 
C.  709. 
C.     711. 


476 


Soul 


INDEX 


Sound 


Soul.    Fifine,      4:405.       C     714. 

200. 
Fifine,     4 :  408,        C.     715. 

283. 
Fifine,     4:427.        C.     726. 

70. 
Red    Cott.    5:2.      C.   737. 

217. 
Red    Cott.  5:7.      C.    739. 

28. 
Red  Cott.   5:20.     C.   744. 

70.     194. 
Red  Cott.  5:33.      C.  748. 

219. 
Red   Cott.   5:61,      C.   759. 

21. 
Red  Cott.  5:67,      C.  762. 

43- 
Ari.    A.    5:100.      C.   628. 

279. 
Ari.    A.    5:232.      C.    678. 

218. 
Inn    A.    5:285,       C.     790. 

72. 
Inn     A.    5:294.       C.    794. 

146. 

La  S.  6 :  66.     C.  8.55.     268, 

La  S.  6 :  68,     C.  855,    48. 

Two  Poets,  6:  79.     C.  859. 

97. 

Ned  B.  6 :  147.     C.  890. 

Prol.  Dra.  I.  2d.  6: 153.     C. 

892.     115. 

Ixion,  6:208.     C.  916.    178. 

•Epil.     Eagle,    6:241,      C. 

930.     94. 
Camel-D.   6:259.      C.   937. 

131. 
Epil.    Plot-C.    6:267.      C. 

940.     219. 
Epil.  Pillar,  6 :  271.     C.  942, 

30. 
Bean -St.   6:277.      C.  944. 

264. 
Bean -St.   6:278.      C.  944. 

78. 
Ber.  de  M,  6:  296,     C,  952. 

244. 
Geo.  B,  D.  6:  326.     C.  964. 

121. 
Fr.    Fu.    6:336.      C.   968. 

37. 
Ger.  de  L.  6:  347.     C.  972. 

197. 
Chas.   A.   6:357.      C.   976. 

161. 
Bad   D.   II.   6:397;    7:19. 

C.  990.     226. 


Soul.    Rev.    6:435;     7:103.      C. 

1(X)5.     203. 
Soul  -  cleansed.     Red   Cott,  5 :  .30. 
,  t".  747.  _ 

Soul-cravings.    Prince   H.  4 :  352. 
^  C.  690. 
Soul-defence.    Ari,  A,  5:117.     C. 

635. 
Soul  -  development.      Two  Poets, 

6:11.5.     C.  874. 
Sold  -  disease.     Red   Cott.  5 :  69, 

C.  762. 
Soul-entoiled.      Fust,   6 :  377.      C. 

984.     224. 
Soul-flight.     Prol.  La  S.  6 :  53.    C. 
^  849.     233. 
Soul  -  hydroptic.        Gram.    Fun. 

2 :  312.     C.  280. 
Soul  -  keenly,     Agam,  6 :  49,     C. 

848, 
Soul -proficiency,     Fifine,   4:402, 

C.  713, 
Soul-safety's,     Fr.  Fu.  6 :  330.     G. 

965.     54. 
Soul  -  sense  -  fusing.      Flute  -  M. 

6:421;  7:74.     C.  999. 
Soul-wine.    Saul,  2 :  63.     C.  182. 
Soul's.    Cliris.-Eve,4:31.    C.  327. 
21, 

Cleon,     4:116,        C.     359. 

137. 

In    a    B.   4:146.      C.  370. 

137- 

J.    Lee,    4:160.      C.    375. 

19. 

Fifine,  4 :  429.     C.  727.     27. 

Chris.  Sm.  6:  312.     C.  959. 

57- 
Souls,     R.  &  B.  3:278,     C.  525, 

209. 
R.   cfe  B,  3:385,      C,  565, 

243. 
R.  &   B,  3:398.      C.   570. 

157. 
Fra  Lippo,  4 :  78.     C.  344. 

179. 
In    a   B.   4:141.      C.   368. 

284. 
Balau.     4 :  327,       C.     627. 

266. 
Epil.  Eagle,  6 :  241.     C.  930. 

94. 
Souls' -  cure.      Agam.   6:50.      C 


848. 
Sound, 


Straf 
90. 
By    Fire.   2:65 
38. 


185.      C.    71. 
C.    187. 


477 


Sound 


INDEX  Speech 


Sonnd.     R.&B.  3:366.     C.   557. 

226. 
Sound-hearted.     Don.   6 :  194.     C. 

Sill. 
SoundHer.      A  Blot,   2:152.      C. 

220. 
Sour-faced.    R.  &  B.  3:24fi,     C. 
.512.     12. 

Baku.  4 :  :i06.     C.  619. 

Sour-sweet.    R.  &  B.  3  :  310.     C. 

5:^7. 
Sourly-Sage.    Bean-St.  6 :  277.    C. 

944. 
Souse.     Fifine.  4:410.     C.  717. 
South.     Para.  1:.«.     C.  15.     61. 
Sow-ear-bom.     Inn  A.  5  :  252.     C. 

"tTi. 
Sown-ones.     Ari.   A.   5 :  180.      C 

SowTi  -  stuff.      Agam.    6 :  43.      C. 

Space.  Para.  1 :  71.     C.  29.  33. 

Spade.  Ari.   A.  5:108.     C.  6;i2. 

238. 

Spain.  Soul's   Tr.     2 :  353.  C. 

296. 

Span.  Bean-St.   6:271.      C.  942. 

255- 
Span-long.     Two  Poets,  6  :  78.     C. 

8.59. 
Spare-Horse.      Pacch.  5  :  327.      C. 

8(J5. 
Spare-Horses.     Pacch.  5  :  323.     C. 

S04. 
SpareHer.     Pippa,  1 :  .3.54.     C.  139. 
Sparing.    R.  &  B.  3:  70.     C.  442. 

213. 
Spark.     R.   &   B.  3:31.     C.  426. 

153. 
R.   &  B.  3:103.     C.  A55. 

25- 
Ben  Ezra,  4  :  186.     C.  383. 

Fifine,     4:401.        C.     712. 

233. 
Spark-like.     R.    &   B.   3:1.      C. 


R.  &  B.  3  :  .362.     C.  556. 


414 
Sparks 

170. 
Sparrow-chirp.    R.    &   B.   3:250. 

C.  .514.     187. 
Sparrow-hawk.      R.   &   B.   3:75. 

C.  444.     18. 
Sparta.     Phei.  6 :  125.     C.  878. 
Spasm.      Ixion,    6:207.      C.   916. 

91. 
Spawned.     R.   &  B.  3:223.      C. 

503.     267. 

478 


Speak,    Woman's,  2 :  23.     C.  171. 
249. 

Soul's  Tr.  2  :  338.     C.  289, 

261. 

Soul's  Tr.  2 :  346.     C.  293. 

224. 

R.    &   B.  3:379.      C.  562. 

126. 

Ari.    A,    5:104.      C,    630. 

119. 
Spear  -  arm.      Echet.  6 :  153.      C. 

892. 
Spear-captured.     Agam.  6:13.    C. 

8:^5. 
Speap-heads.     By  Fire.  2  :  «).     C. 

185.     6. 
Spear-headed.    Agam.  6:21.      C. 

838. 
Spear  -  shaft.      Agam.    6 :  5.      C. 

8.32. 
Spear-stroke.    Ari.  A.  5  :  194.     C. 

665. 
Spear  -  throw.     Agam.   6  :  6.      C 

832. 
Spear-thmst.     Ari.  A.  5  :  1C8.     C. 

632. 
Spear-thrusts.    Agam.  6  :  14.      C. 

.  ^'^'■ 
Spear-work.     Ari.  A.  5:1S7.     C 

663. 
Special-pleading.  Bishop  B.  4  :  110. 

C.  3.5fi.     262. 
Specious.      Para.    1 :  72.      C.    29. 

Speck-centre.     Chve,  6 :  157.      C. 

894. 
Speckled -coated.     Balau.  4  :  21>4. 

C.  614. 
Spectacle.      R.   &  B.   3:12.      C. 

419.     195. 
Spectacles.     Chris. -Eve,  4  :  19.    C. 

323.     69. 
Spectrum.     R.   &  B.  3:387.      C. 

566.     262. 
Speculation-shop.    Ari.  A.  5 :  174. 

C.  fi58. 
Speech.      Sor.     1:298.       C.     116. 
24. 

Sor.  1:300.     C.  117.     260. 

Luria,     2:394.        C.     312. 

281. 
R.   &  B.  3:269.     C.  521. 

65. 
R.  &.   B.   3:471,     C.  599. 

242. 
Fifine,     4:423.        C.     724. 

253- 
Fifine,  4 :  427.     C.  T21.  126. 


Speech 


INDEX 


Spirit-wrecked 


Speech.    Red  Cott.  5 :  3G.     C.  750. 

263. 
Red    Cott.   5:48.      C.    754. 

223. 
Red   Cott.   5  :  75.      C.  7fJ5. 

2. 
Bean  -  St.  6 :  271.     C.   942. 

255. 
Speechless.      Inn  A.   5:290.      C. 

792.     145. 
Speed.     Epil.   A.    6:440;   7:114. 

C.  1007.     243. 
Spend.     Red  Cott.  5  :  48.     C.  754. 

190. 
Spending.      R.    &   B.   3:43.      C. 

4;;i.    13. 

Sphere-songr.    La  S.  6:59.     C.  851. 
140. 

Fust,  6  :  377.     C.  984. 

Spheric.     Fust,  6 :  380.     C.  985. 
Sphery.     Bea.   Sig.  6:412;   7:85. 

C.  9915. 
Spice-belt.     Sor.  1 :  249.     C.  96. 
Spice -nut.      Fifine,    4:424.       C. 

725. 
Spice-scented.    Joch.   6 :  226.      C. 

924. 
Spice-tree.     Sor.  1 :  237.     C.  92. 
Spice-tree's.      Druses,   2 :  99.      C. 

198. 
Spider.    R.&B.  3:257.     C.  517. 
199- 

Gold  H.  4 :  168.     C.  378. 

Inn    A.    5:293.      C.     793. 

6. 

Mary  W.  6:206.      C.  916. 

171. 
Spider-films.     Para.  1 :  &3.     C.  26. 
Spider-fingers.     Para.   1 :  107.     C. 

42. 
Spider-soul.    R.  &  B,  3:59.     C. 

4.37.     70. 
Spider-webs.    R.&B.  3:144.    C. 

471. 
Spiders.     FHght,  2  :  298.     C.  274. 
SpiUa.      Bea.   Sig.   6:419;    7:70. 

C.  9S)9. 
Spilt.    R.   &  B.  3:248.     C.  51.3. 

160. 
Spilth.    Sor.  1:240.     C.  93. 
Spinks.    Ari.  A.  5:231.     C.  677. 
Spinning-tops.    Ari,  A.  5 :  125.    C 

638. 
Spires.    R.  &   B.   3:51.     C.  4.34. 

288. 
Spirit.     Para.  1 :  .55.     C.  23.     238. 

Para.  1 :  .56.     C.  23.     21 . 

Para.  1 :  116.     C.  46.      116. 


Spirit.   Straf.  1 :  181.    C.  GO.  172. 
Colorabe,   2 :  215.      C.  'Mi. 

153. 
Stat.  &  B.  2:  325.     C.  285. 

140. 
Eiis.-Day,  4:47.      C.  332. 

C.  .334. 

C.  341. 

C.  373, 

C.  626, 

C.  74<5. 


Ea.s.  -  Day,  4 :  53. 

203. 

.Joli.   Agri.   4:71. 

95- 

J.     Lee,    4:155. 

35. 

Balau.     4 :  325. 

48. 

Red   Cott.   5:27. 

42. 

Shop,  5 :  .341 .     C.  810.     221 . 

La  S.  6 :  61.     C.  8.52.     21. 

Spii-it  -  bird.      Pillar,   6:269.      C. 

941. 
Spirit-birth.     R.  &  B.  3:  322.     C. 

541.     262. 
Spirit-biting.      Agam.   6:23,      C. 

8.39. 
Spirit-bravado.     R.    &   B.  3:454. 

C.  593. 
Spirit -broken.     R.  &  B.  3:187. 

C.  489. 
Spirit-fire.     Sun,  6:  249.     C.  933. 
Spirit-motions.     Prince  H.  4 :  352, 

C.  (ifX). 
Spirit-pattern.     Fr.Fu.  6:332.    C. 

966. 
Spirit-person.     Doctor,  6 :  182.     C. 

iH)6. 
Spirit-place.    Ari.   A.  5:101.     C. 

t)29. 
Spirit-pure.    Stat.  &  B.  2:  .322.   C. 

284.     100. 
Spirit-rainbow.     Prince  H.  4:  356. 

C.  692. 
Spirit-sense.     House,   5:337.      C. 

809.     184. 
Spirit  -  Seven.       Numph.    5 :  348. 

C.  813. 
Spirit-small.     By  Fire.  2 :  (52.     C. 

186.     24. 
Spirit-sort.     Prol.  Fif .  4 :  .383.     C. 

702. 
Spirit-thrnst.     Ari.  A.  5:171.     C. 

().')().     264. 
Spirit-travels.      Chris. -Eve,   4:18. 

C.  322. 
Spirit-work.     In  a  B.  4:147.     C. 

317.     245. 
Spirit-wrecked.     At  the  M.  5:  334, 

C.  808. 


479 


Spirit-'writing 


INDEX 


Stable-grooms 


Spirit-writing.    Sludge,  4 :  226.    C. 

399. 
Spirit's.      Crist.  2:  18.       C.   1G9. 

164. 
Spitten.    Sun,  6:249.     C.  933. 
Splashed.     Bean -St.  6:274.     C. 

94.!.    266. 
Splav-foot.    R.  &  B.  3:324.     C. 

542.     186. 
Spleen-fits.     Two  Poets,  6 :  83.    C. 

861.     189. 
Splendor.       R.   &   B.   3:  12.      C. 
419.     245. 

R.    &   B.   3:32.       C.   427. 

252. 

R.  &  B.  3:191.      C.  490. 

91. 

Death  in  D.  4 :  192.     C.  386. 

253- 
Splendor-proof.     Joh.  Agri.  4:71. 

C.  341. 
Splenetically.     Ari.  A.  5 :  238.     C. 

(iSO. 
Splinter-heaps.     Ivkn,  6 :  138.     C. 

884. 
Split.    R.   &  B.  3:217.     C.  500. 

256. 
Splotch.    Red  Cott.  5 :  10.     C.  740. 
SpoU.     Joeh.6:232.    C.  927.    131. 
Spoil-laden.     EpU.  Plot-C.  6:267. 

C.  940.     159. 
Spoils.    R.  &  B.  3:233.     C.  507. 

292. 
Spoiled.     Para.  1 :  76.    C.  31.    100. 
Spoke.    Sor.  1:291.     C.  113.     54. 
Spoken.     Inn  A.  5 :  290.     C.  794. 

146. 
Spontaneouslv.      R.    &   B.   3:  84. 

C.  447.     256. 
Spoon-fed.      Death   in   D.  4:201. 

C.  389. 
Sport.     Waring,   2:274.     C.   266. 

59- 

Don.  6: 193.     C.  911.     241. 

Spot.     Para.  1 :  41.     C.  17.     20. 

Para.  1 :  80.     C.  32.     142. 

Spot-hack'd.    Ari.  A.  5:190.     C. 

664 
Spot-skin.     Balau.  4 :  294.     C.  614. 
Spots.     Lovers'  Q.  2 :  29.     C.  173. 

247. 
Spreti.    R.&B.  3:285.     C.  527. 
Sprig  -  pattern  -  papered.      Inn  A. 

5 :  24:;.     C.  774. 
Sprightlier.      Two  Poets,   6:  105. 

C.  870. 
Spring.     Pan.  1:2.     C.  3. 
Pau.  1:6.     C.  4.    I2. 


Spring.      Pippa,    1:  337.     C.   133. 

289. 
Red   Cott.   5:35.      C,  749. 

Red  Cott.  5 :  54.    C.  756.    4. 

Red  Cott.  5:  66.     C.  761, 

Spring-hirth.     Old  Pict.  2 :  41.     C. 

177. 
Spring-flowers.     R.   &  B.  3:271. 

C.  522. 
Spring-mom.    Red  Cott.  5 :  75.    C. 

765. 
Spring-sap.     R.  &  B.  3 :  202.     C. 

495. 
Spring  -  smells.     King  V.   1 :  371. 

C.  146. 
Spring  -  sounds.     King  V.   1:371. 

C.  14<J. 
Spring-tide.     Chas.  A.  6:  362.     C. 

978. 
Springe.    R.  &  B.  3:  86.     C.  448. 
SpriteUest-scheming.     Geo.  B.  D. 

6:320.     C.  962.     151. 
Spume-flakes.    How,  2:5.    C  165. 
Spume-sheet's.     Chas.   A.  6 :  358. 

C.  976. 
Spun-out.     R.   &   B.  3:114.      C. 

459. 
Spurge.      Childe  R.  2:  332.      C. 

287. 
Spurn.    Para.  1 :  57.     C.  24.     196. 

Pippa,  1:362.    C.  143.    248. 

Geo.  B.  D.  6:  321.     C.  962. 

59- 
Spumed.      R.   &  B.  3:338.      C. 

547.     267. 
Spurred.     Fifine,  4:402.     C.   712. 

79. 
Spy.     R.  &  B.  3:202.      C.  495. 
158. 

Ponte  A.  6:409;  7:51.     C. 

995.     19. 
Spy-prowler.     Pippa,   1 :  356.      C 

140. 
Squabble.     R.   &   B.   3:333.     C. 

545.     72. 
Squander.     Pippa,  1 :  327.     C.  129. 

46. 
Square  -  faced.     Sor.   1 :  271.      C. 

105. 
Squeeze.    Fifine,  4:421.     C.  723. 

137- 
Stab-and-stitch.     Ari.  A.  5 :  150. 

C.  648. 
Stabilif y.     Prince  H.  4 :  337.     C. 

684. 
Stable-grooms.    R.&B. 3: 55.    C. 

435. 


480 


Stade-point 


INDEX 


Stade-point.     Ari.   A.  5 :  106.     C 

631. 
Staff.     R.   &   B.  3:18.     C.  421. 
77- 

Eed  Cott.  5:27.      C.  746. 

274. 
Stag-horiis.      Ned  B.   6:147.     C. 

8<)0. 
Stag-homed.    Ari.  A.  5 :  117.     C 

635. 
Stag-hunt.     Red   Cott.  5:33.     C. 

748. 
Staghixnt-month.    Ari.  A.  5  :  102. 

C.  629. 
Stage.    Straf.  1 :  130.    C.  50.    120. 

Sor.  1 :  215.     C.  83.     76. 

R.   &  B.   3:12.       C.  419. 

195- 

R.   &    B.   3:19.      C.  422. 

281. 

R.   &  B.  3:365.     C.  557. 

239. 

Joch.  6 :  213.     C.  919. 

Stage  -  forgetfuhiess.      Red  Cott. 

5  :  30.     C.  747. 
Stage -habitude.     Ari.  A.  5:119. 

C.  636. 
Stage-mimicking.     Ari.  A.  5: 166. 

C.  654. 
Stager.     Red  Cott.  5:  29.     C.  747. 

212 

Stain."    Bad  D.   II.   6:396;  7:19. 

C.  990.     179. 
Stain-free.      Numph.   5 :  350.      C. 

814. 
Stains.    A  Blot,  2:163.     C.  224. 

236. 
Staircase-landing.     R.  &  B.  3 :  150. 

C.  474. 
Staled.     R.   &  B.  3:9.     C.  417. 

Stalking-horse.    R.   &  B.  3:203. 

C.  495. 
Stalking-season.    Don.  6 :  199.     C. 

913. 
Stalloreggi.     Pacch.   5:  319.      C. 

803. 
Stammering.     Flight,  2 :  305.     C. 

277.     235. 
Stammeringly.     R.   &   B.   3:  357. 

C.  554.     236. 
Stamp.    R.  &  B.  3: 161.     C.  478. 

7- 
Red  Cott.  5:27.     C.   746. 

274. 
Stanch.   R.  &B.3:68.    C.441.   7. 
Stanched.     Herv4, 5 :  357.    C  816. 
106, 


Stars 
Prince  n.   4:  361. 


Stanchioned. 

C.  693.     134. 
Stand.      Luiia,    2:386.      C.   308. 

282. 
Stand-still.    Sor.  1 :  233.     C.  J)0. 
Stander-by.    Phei.6:125.    C.  878. 
Standers-by.    Colombe,  2 :  194.    C 

_  2:r,. 

Standers-apart.    Agam.  6 :  12.    C 

835._ 
Standing-point.     Red   Cott.  5 :  27. 

C.  746.     274. 
Standing-space.    Red  Cott.  5 :  29. 

C.  747. 
Star.     Pau.  1:1.     C.  2.     252. 

Pau.  1 :  ().     C.  4.    274. 

Para.  1 :  39.     C.  17.     126. 

titraf .  1 :  183.     C.  70.     72. 

Sor.  1 :  241.     C.  93.     217. 

Sor.  1 :  319.     C.  125.     225. 

R.  &B.  3:15.     C.420.    51. 

R.  &  B.  3:381.      C.  563. 

167. 

Abt  V.  4 :  184.     C.  383, 

Fr.    Fu.  6:333.       C.  967. 

264. 

Rev.    6:  435  ;    7:  103.       C. 

1005.     34. 
Star-beam.     Plot-C.  6:265.      C. 

939. 
Star -change.     Prince  H.  4:338. 
^  C.  6S5. 
Star -crown.     Inn  A.  5:265.     C. 

782. 
Star-device.    Fr.  Fu.  6:331.     C. 

966. 
Star -faced.    Ari.  A.   5:190.     C. 

664. 
Star-fashion.     R.  &  B.  3:  13.     C 

419.     238. 
Star-flecks.     Rev.   6:434;  7:102. 

C.  1005.     62. 
Star-groups.     Agam,  6:4.    C831. 
Star-King.     Cherries,   6 :  263.     C. 

939.     155. 
Star-Uke.     Sor.  1 :  224.     C.  87. 
Star-shaped.     Para.  1 :  85.     C.  34, 
Star-shiue.      Last  R.  2:279.      C. 

267. 
Stars.    Saul,  2:58.     C.  184.     12. 

R.   &  B.  3:272.      C.  523. 

18. 

R.  ct   B.  3:371.      C.  559. 

198. 
R.  cfe   B.  3:408.      C.  574. 

237- 

Inn    A.    5:287.       C.    791. 

228. 


481 


stars 

Stars. 


Xed    B.   6:  146.     C. 
225. 

Imp.   Aug.   6:  425  ;    7:  84. 

C.  l(»f)l.    50. 
Starlike.     R.  &B.  :i:1.3.     C.  410. 
Starchedly.     Red   Cott.   5:9.     C. 

740.     118. 
Stare.    R.  &  B.  3:69.      C.  441. 

87. 
Two  Poets,  6 :  106.     C.  870. 

290. 
Stark-naked.     Sor.  1:23.3.     C.  90. 

Trans.  4 :  57.     C.  335.     252. 

Stark-stretched.      R.  &  B.  3:15. 

C.  420. 
Starrier.    A  Blot,  2:145.     C.  217. 

68. 
Start.    Sor.  1:. 314.     C.  122.     IQS- 
Start^way.    Sor.  1 :  252.     C.  98. 
Starting- place.      Dis  Al.   4:175. 

C.  380. 
Starting-point.     R.  &  B.   3:388. 

C.  5(;6.     137. 
Bean -St.   6:276.      C.  944. 

176. 
Starved.     Karsh.   4:67.     C.   339. 

241. 

St.  Prax.  4 :  91 .     C.  349. 

In  a  B.  4:137.      C.  366. 

232. 
Apol.  &  F.  6 :  292.     C.  951. 

284. 
State  -  business.     An.   A.   5 :  155. 


INDEX 

889 


C.  650. 
State-candle's.     Pacch.  5:324.    C. 

804. 
Statecraft.      Forgiv.   5:  366.      C. 

820.     105. 
Statesman.     Joch.  6 :  226.     C.  924. 
Statesman  -  shape.      Geo.    B.    D. 

6 :  324.     C.  963. 
Statesmanship.     R.   &  B.  3:331. 

C.  544.     186. 
Station-precinct.      Inn   A.   5:253. 

C.  111. 
Statist.      Joch.    6:  213.       C.    919. 

7- 
Statist's.    Ari.  A.  5: 105.     C.  6.30. 

176. 
Statue.      Cleon,  4 :  118.      C.   359. 

247. 
Two  Poets,  6 :  109.     C.  871. 

75- 
Statue-thing.    Red  Cott.  5:  31.    C. 

748. 
Stay.    Luria,2:401.    C..314.    217. 
Stay-at-home.      Chas.    A.   6:  355. 

C.  975. 


Stimulants 

C. 
C. 


Steadfast.    Bishop  B.  4: 109, 

356.     73. 
Steady.      R.   &    B.  3:  384. 

5<)5.     118. 
Steal.     Pau.  1:7.     C.  4.     239. 
Steals.     Pau.  1:24.     C.  11.     223. 
Stealing-f orth.     Ber.  de  M.  6 :  297. 

C.  953. 
Steel.     Luria,  2 :  .SW.    C.  .300.    25. 
Steel-bright.     Inn  A.   5 :  244.     V. 

774. 
Steel-gray.     Ger.  de  L.  6 :  349.     C. 

972.     187. 
Steel -sheathed.    Sor.   1:276.     C. 

107. 
Steeple.    Red  Cott.  5:9.     C.  740. 
Steeple-perch.     Inn  A.  5 :  249.     C. 

776. 
Steerage-hole.    BLshop  B.  4:100. 

C.  .352. 
Steiner.  Lucie.     Red  Cott.  5:38. 

C.  751. 
Step.    Straf .  1 : 1.39.     C.  53.    214. 

Sor.  1 :  .325.     C.  127.     158. 

OldPict.2:40.    C.  177.   30. 

R.   &   B.  3:30.      C.  426. 

255. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  436.     C.  585.  61 . 

Bishop  B.  4:  108.     C.  356. 

80. 

Fifine,4:441.    C.  7.34.    268. 

Hal.  &  Hob,  6: 1:30.      C. 

880.     23. 
Step -dame.     Balau.  4:282.     C. 

610. 
Stephen.     R.    &    B.   3:  3.56.      C. 

554. 
Stepping-stone.    R.  &  B.   3:365. 

C.  557. 
Stem-cables.      Agam.   6 :  29.      C. 

841. 
StemHer.     R.   &  B.  3:383.     C. 

564. 
Stiatta.      Soul's  Tr.   2  :  ^57.      C. 

298. 
Stiff -starched.     Inn  A.  5 :  310.     C. 

MiO. 
Stiff -stoled.     Fifine,  4:402.     C. 

712. 
Still.    Luria,  2:392.     C.  311.    55. 
StiU-at-itch.    Ari.  A.  5:154.     C. 

650. 
StiU-decaying.     Pau.  1 :  16.     C.  8. 
Still-increasing.     Pau.  1 :  17.    C.  8. 
StiU-retreating.     Pan,   6 :  189.     C. 

<»09. 
Stimulants.     R.&B.  3:42.3.     C. 

580.     288. 
482 


sting 


INDEX 


Sting.     Druses,  2 :  122.    C.  207.    3. 

R.  &  B.  3:423,      C.  580. 

92. 

Ben  Ezra,  4:  186,     C.  384. 

276. 

Pietro,  6 :  179.     C.  738,    21 . 

Stings.     Inn  A.   5:279,     C.    787. 

146. 
Stinging-nettle.      Ari.   A.   5:  172. 

C.  657. 
Stinted.    J.  Lee,  4 :  163,     C.  376. 

148. 
Stir-up.    Flight,  2:308,     C.  278. 
Stitch -man.     Agam,  6:49,     C. 

84.^. 
Stock-fish.    R.  &  B.  3:131.     C. 

466. 
Stock-like.     Two  Poets,  6 :  90.    C 

864. 
Stock-still.    R.  &  B.  3:427.     C. 

582.     III. 
Stocking  -  stuff.     Red  Cott,   5 :  6. 

C.  738. 
Stockishness.     Straf ,   1 :  167.      C. 

64. 
Stomach.     Death  in  D.  4 :  202.     C. 

390.     53. 
Stomach  -  moving.      Two    Poets, 

6:102.     C.  869. 
Stomach-turning,    Ari.  A.  5 :  175. 

C.  658. 
Stomp.       Englishm.   2:263,       C. 

262. 
Stone.    Straf.  1:151.    C.  54.    104. 

Sor.  1 :  236.     C.  92.     2. 

R.  &  B.  3:111.      C.  458. 

41. 

R.  &  B.  3:329.      C,  544. 

202. 

R.   &  B,  3:432,     C.  584. 

i6g. 

Ari.  A.  5: 132.    C,641,    18. 

Inn    A.    5 :  252.      C.    777. 

193. 
Stone-dead.    Red  Cott.  5 :  82.     C. 

767, 
Stone -faced.    Up  — Down,  2:32. 

C.  174. 
Stone-like.    R.  &  B.  3:259.     C. 

517.     136. 
Stone-slab.      R.   &   B.  3:3.      C. 

415. 
Stone-squarer.     Pippa,  1 :  340.     C 

VM. 
Stone-still.    R.  «S;  B.  3:211,     C. 

498.     254. 
Stone -throw.     Fil.  Bald.  5:376. 

C,  824.     266, 


Straight 

R.  &  B.  3:424.     C. 
C. 


Stone-wall 

5«0.     151. 
Stone-white.     Forgiv.  5 :  300. 

817. 
Stone-work.     Bad  D.  Ill,  6:398; 

7:22.     C.  9<.K).     276. 
Stone's-cast.      Luna,   2:397,      C. 

313. 
Stones,    R.  &  B.  3 :  187.     C.  489. 

90. 
R.   &  B.  3:229.      C.  506, 


^55. 
Stoning.    Pietro,  6: 168.     C.  899. 

183. 
Stoop.      Fifine,    4:415.      C.    719. 

114. 
Stooped .    R .  <fe  B ,  3 :  429,     C.  583, 

80. 
Stop.     A  Blot,  2:154.      C.  221. 
277. 

Red  Cott.  5:27.     C.  747. 

85. 
Stop-estray.     Ari.   A.   5 :  173,     C. 

f)58. 
Stop-gap,    Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  .319.     C. 

961. 
Stoppage.     Red   Cott.   5 :  17,      C 

743.     17. 
Stopped-up.     Andrea,  4 :  84.      C. 

346. 
Storm-cloud.    Numph.  5 :  349.    C. 

813. 
Storm-dismantled,     Clive,  6 :  156, 
^  C.  894. 
Storm-notes.     Prol.  Pacch.  5:  317. 

C.  802.     196. 
Storm-stirred.     Chris.  Sm.  6  :  315, 

C.  960.     217. 
Storming -day.      Incident,  2:231. 

C.  251. 
Story.    Sor.  1:207.     C.  80.     231. 
R.    &    B,  3:11.      C.  418. 

251. 
R.    &   B.   3:441.      C.  587. 

187. 
Two  Poets,  6 :  81.     C.  860. 

no. 

IvJin,  6  : 1.31.     C.  881.     176, 

Story-hooks.    Red  Cott.  5:8,     C. 

739.     131. 
Stove-forced.     Two  Poets,  6:81. 


C.  8(il. 
Stove -side. 

399. 
Straight.      King   V.    1:388, 
153.    261. 

In    a  B.  4:147.      C.  370. 

41. 


Sludge,  4:227.      C. 

c. 


483 


Straight-up 


INDEX 


Straight-up.    R.  «S;  B.  3 :  233.     C. 

507.     24. 
Strange.     In  a  Y.  2 :  82.     C.  192. 

^43- 

Ari.  A.  5  :  159.     C.  652.     i . 

Bea.  Sig.  G  :  412  ;  7  :  57.    C. 

99(5.     179. 
Strange  -  tongued.      Agam.   6 :  36. 

C.  843. 
Strangelier.      Geo.   B.   D.   6:325. 

C.  94G.     2. 
Stranger.     Inn  A.  5 :  291.     C.  792. 

286. 
Stranger  -  birds.       Fifine,    4  :  438. 

C.  732. 
Stranger-friend.    Prince  H.  4  :  358. 

C.  692. 
Stranger-guest.     Sor,   1 :  199.      C 

11. 
Stranger -hating.      Balau.   4:293. 

C.  614. 
Stranger- like.     R.   «fe  B.  3:237. 
C.  508.     33. 

Ari.  A.  5 :  164.     C.  654. 

Stranger  -  seen.      Holy-C.    2 :  319. 

C.  282. 
Stranger  -  shade.      Fifine,    4 :  413. 

C.  718. 
Stranger-throng.     R.  &  B.  3 :  258. 

C.  517.    42. 
Stranger -vine.     Sor.   1:274.      C 

106. 
Stranger-visitant.    R.  &  B.  3 :  114. 

C.  459. 
Stranger-woman.    Ari.  A.  5 :  135. 

C.  642. 
Stranger's.  Flute-M.  6 :  422  ;  7 :  77. 

C.  1(X)0.    208. 
Strangers' -pest.     Ari.  A.  5:190. 

C.  664. 
Strangles.    Joeh.  6 :  230.     C.  926. 

67. 
Stratagem.     Fifine,  4:  415.    C.  720. 

282. 
Straw-fire.     Fra  Lippo,  4  :  77.     C. 

343.     259. 
Straw-thatched.    R.  &  B.  3:391. 

C.  567.     87. 
Straw-truss.    R.  &  B.  3:  404.     C. 

572. 
Straw-work.    R.   &   B.   3:3.     C. 

415. 
Stray-away.     Ari.   A.  5:231.     C. 

677. 
Stray-leaves.    "Waring,  2 :  270.     C. 

264. 
Strayaway.    R.  &  B.  3  :  169.     C. 

481. 


Stress 
C.  568. 


Streaks.    R.  &B.3:392. 

34. 
Stream.      La    S.   6:62.      C.   853. 

211. 

Streamlet-side.    Balau.  4:  271.    G. 

605. 
Street.      Flight,   2:304.      C.   211. 
104. 

R.  &  B.   3:171.      C.  482. 

99- 
Street-flags.    Red  Cott.  5:8.     C. 

739. 
Street -length.      Red  Cott.  5:12. 

C.  741. 
Street-terms.    Ari.  A.  5 :  147.     C. 

647. 
Streets.      Sor.     1:258.       C.    100. 

162. 
Strength.     Para.    1:35.      C.    15. 
274. 

Colombe,  2:277.      C.  249. 

29. 

R.  &B.  3:31,     C.  426.    12, 

R.   &  B.  3:324.     C.  542. 

98. 
R.   &  B.  3:325.     C.  542, 

R.   &  B.  3:342.      C.  549. 

28. 
R.   &  B.  3:388,     C.  566. 

R.   &' B.  3:389.      C.  567. 

275. 
R.   &  B.  3:392.     C.  568. 

275. 
R.   &  B.  3:433.      C.  584, 

In    a   B.   4:146.      C.   370, 

137- 
Balau.     4:299.       C.     616. 

178. 
Ari.    A.    5:120.      C.    636, 

284. 
Inn    A,     5:271,       C.    784. 

90. 
Ber.  de  M.  6 :  296.     C.  952, 

244. 
Chris.  Sm.  6:  317.     C,  961. 

158. 

Geo.  B.  D.  6:  322.     C.  962. 

Fr.    Fu.    6:333.      C.    967. 

200. 
Strengths.    R.   &   B.   3:200,     C. 

494.     105. 
Strepitant.    Master  H.  2 :  94.     C. 

im. 

Stress,      Karsh.    4:64.      C.    338. 
81, 
484 


stretched 


INDEX 

C.  56 


Stretched.    Straf.  1:147 

log. 
Strewment-spoiling.    Agam.  6 :  28. 

C.  841. 
Strife.     Waring,  2:274.      C.  2{J6, 


■  Soul's  Tr.  2  :  345.     C.  292. 

183. 
Too  Late,  4:178.     C.  381. 

241. 
Fifine,     4:428.        C.     727. 

183. 
Ber.  de  M.  6 :  29G.     C.  952. 

66. 
Reph,  6 :  433 ;    7  :  99.      C. 

1004.     26. 


Strifes.    R.  &  B.  3: 124.     C.  463. 

156. 
Strigils.     Imp.  Aug.  6 :  428 ;  7 :  88. 

C.  1002. 
String.      Two  Poets,   6 :  115.      C. 

8J4.     147. 
Strings.    Two  Poets,  6 :  114.      C 

873.     151. 
Stripped.    Pacch.  5 :  322.     C.  804. 

67. 
Strive.       Para.     1:  66.       C.     27. 
36. 

By    Fire.    2:65.      C.   187. 

196. 

Andrea,     4 :  84.      C.     346. 

55- 
Bishop  B.  4:106.     C.  355. 

Strives.     Fifine,  4:405.     C.   714. 

200. 
Ber.  de  M.  6 :  296.      C.  952. 

96. 
Fr.    Fu.    6:329.      C.    965. 

189. 
Strode.    Straf .  1 :  130.     C.  50. 
Strong.      Para.    1:111.      C.   44. 

224. 

Straf.  1 :  182.     C.  70.     132. 

Childe  R.  2 :  336.     C.  289. 

142. 
R.   &  B.  3:207.      C.  497. 

274. 
R.   &  B.  3:276.      C.  524. 

275. 
R.   &  B.  3:432.     C.  584. 

169. 
In  a    B.  4:136.      C.  366. 

262. 
Fifine,     4:415.       C.     720. 

206. 
Strong-sensed.     R.  *&;  B.  3:296. 


Sublime 

Lost  Mis.  2:20.      C. 
Doctor,    6:181. 


C.  q32. 


Stronger. 

170.     86. 
Strongest  -  bom 

C.  906.    49. 
StrongUer.     Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  325.    C. 

;t46.     2. 
Struggle.     Luria,  2  :  36.5.     C.  :300. 
248. 

In    a   B.   4:147.      C.   317. 

245. 

Fifine,     4:425.       C.     725. 

172. 
Struggles.     Saul,   2:57.      C.  184. 

207. 
Strum-strum.    Pacch.  5 :  330.     C. 

807. 
Stucco-heap.    Two  Poets,  6 :  101. 

C.  868. 
Stucco  -  twiddlings.      Bishop    B. 

4  :  92.     C.  349. 
Stuff"."'  Joch.    6:232.      C.     927. 

131. 
Stumble.    Geo.  B.  D.  6:  326.     C. 

964.     121. 
Stumbled.    R.  &  B.  3:179.     C. 
486.     220. 

R.    &   B.  3:295.      C.  531. 

61. 
Stumbling-block.     R.  &  B.  3 :  437. 
C.  586.    278. 
Bifur.  5  :  347.     C.  812. 


Stung.     R.  &  B.  3 :  338.     C.  547. 

116. 
Stupid.    R.&B.  3:449.     C.  591. 

109. 
Stupid-like.     Caliban,  4:209.     C. 
392. 

Prmce  H.  4 :  .347.     C.  688. 

Stupidly.     R.   &  B.  3:283.     C. 

527.     116. 
Sturdiuess.     R.    &  B.  3:342.     C. 

549.     57. 
Styles,  Tom.    Ned  B.  6: 144.     C. 

888. 
Sub  -  intents.     Before,  2 :  87.     C. 

104. 
Subdue.      Para.    1 :  56.       C.   23. 
21. 

Fra  Lippo,  4 :  75.     C.  343. 

121. 
Subdued.    In  a  B.  4: 136.     C.  3(5(5. 


145- 
Subintelligenti.al.       Geo.     B.     D. 

6 :  325.     C.  964. 
Subjacent.    R.   &  B.  3:398.     C. 

570. 
Sublime.    R.&B.  3: 379.     C.563. 

63. 
485 


Submissive  - 


INDEX 

Fifine, 


Submissive   -   mutinous 

4  : :«!().     C.  70(3. 
Subservient.    Sor.  1 :  31G.     C.  123. 
Subsided.     Epilogue,    4:260.     C. 

41o.     i68. 
Subsiding-iuto-slumber.  Red  Cott. 

5:4.     C.  738. 
Substance.    Fifine,  4: 400.    C.  711. 

222 

SubtiUty.     Sun,  6:249.     C.  933. 
Subtle.     R.  &  B.  3: 123.     C.  463. 

280. 
Subtle-witted.    Luria,  2 :  388.     C. 

310. 
Suburb-palace.    Shop,  5 :  338.     C 

809. 
Succeed.      Para.    1:50.       C.    21. 

77- 
Ben  Ezra,  4:186.     C.  384. 

71- 
Inn    A.    5:261.       C.    780. 

71- 
Inn     A.    5 :  285.       C.    790. 

log. 
Succeeds.    Ari.A.5:177.     C.  659. 

72. 
Succeeder.    EpU.  Fer.  6 :  283.     C. 

946.     19. 
Success.    Pau.  1:13.     C.  7.     189. 

Pau.  1 :  15.     C.  7.    64. 

Luria,     2:381.        C.     307. 

179. 
R.    &   B.   3:95.      C.  451. 

214. 
R.   &  B.  3:374.     C.  560. 

lOI. 

Successes.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  339.     C. 

290.     153. 
Succincter.      Inn  A.    5:243.      C. 

112>. 
Succumbs.    R.   &  B.  3:443.     C. 

588.     79. 
Sucli-an-one.    R.  &  B.  3: 147.     C 

472. 
Such-another.    R.&B.  3:147.   C. 

472. 
Such-like.     Two  Poets,  6 :  104.    C. 

870. 
Sucks.     Pan.  1:1.     C.  2.     190. 
Sueked-in.     Two  Poets,  6 :  102.   C. 

869. 
Sudary.     Para.  1 :  71.     C.  29. 
Sudden.      ChUde   R.  2:333.      C. 

288 
Sufferance.    R.  &  B.  3:301.     C. 

533.     178. 
Sufferer.     Inn  A.  5:287.     C.  790. 

39. 


Sun 
luu   A. 


Sufficiently  -  Instructed, 

5 :  257.     C.  779. 
Suffumigate.      Ponte    A.    6:408; 

7 :  48.     C.  994. 
Suffumigation.     Para.   1:71.      C 

29. 
Sugar-grain.     R.  &  B.  3:  442.     C. 

588.     265. 
Sugar  -  puncheon.      Pied    Piper, 

2:285.     C.  2t;9. 
Suits-at-law.    R.  &  B.  3 :  135.     C. 

468. 
SuUen.    Red  Cott.  5:  73.     C.  764. 

215- 
Sulphur,     R.   &   B.  3:132.      C. 

467. 
Sulphur-blaze.     R.  &  B,  3:103. 

C.  455. 
Sulphur-spume.    Sor.   1 :  201.     C. 

78. 
Sulphur-steeped.    Numph.  5 :  350. 


ulpr 
d.  814. 


Sum.     Chris.-Eve,   4:8.      C.  319. 

145. 
Summed-up.     R.  &  B.   3:4.     C 

416. 
Summer.    J.  Lee,  4 :  155.     C.  374. 
280. 

Flute-M.  6 :  423 ;  7 :  78.     C. 

1000.     230. 
Summer-day.     Epil.  Eagle,  6 :  241. 

C.  930.  _ 
Summer-lightning.    Ari.  A.  5 :  117. 

C.  635. 
Summer  -  lightnings.     Sor.  1 :  214. 

C.  83. 
Summer-prime.     Said,  2 :  53.     C. 

182. 
Summer-space.    Joch.  6:221.     C 

922. 
Summing-up.      La  S.  6:64.     C. 

854. 
Summit-edge.     Prince  H.   4:  35(). 

C.  692. 
Summons.    Balau.4:310.    C.  620. 

224. 
Summoned.    Pict.   Ig.   4:73.     C. 

342.     71. 
Sumpter  -  cloth.    Sor.  1:254.     C. 

99. 
Sun.*    Para.  1 :  121.     C.  48.     187. 

Stat.  «fe  B.  2 :  325.     C.  285. 

272. 

Luria,  2 :  384.     C.  308,     81, 

R.   &  B.   3:219.     C.  501. 

257- 

R.   &   B.   3:223.     C.  503. 

220. 


186 


Sun 

Sun. 


INDEX 
3:390.      C.   5G7, 


R.  &  B 

20. 

J.  Lee,  4 :  157.     C.  374.    97. 

App.  FaU.  4 :  258.     C.  413. 

III. 
Sun-absorbed.     Dan.  Bar.  G :  305. 

C.  95(5. 
Sun-blanched.    Sor.  1:219.    C85. 

Sor.  1 :  304.     C.  118. 

Sun-da^vn.     Para.  1 :  29,     C.  13. 
Sun-dried.    Sor.  1 :  226.     C.  88. 
Sun-fire.     Ari.  A.  5:  114.     C.  ()M. 
Sun-flash.     Fust,  ti:  377.     C.  984. 
Sun  -  fronting.     Agam.   6:17.     C. 


Dan.   Bar.  6:308.     C. 


836._ 
Sun-king. 

957. 
Sun-revealed.      Bea.  Sig.  6:419; 

7:71.     C.  999. 
Sun-ripened.    Sun,  6:251.    C934. 
Sun-road.     Para.  1 :  11(3.     C.  4(j, 
Sun-satisfied.    Red  Cott.  5 :  24.    C. 

745. 
Sun  -  scorched.     Chas.  A.   6 :  354. 

C.  974. 
Sun-smit.      R.   &  B.   3:113.     C. 
459.     14. 

Fifine,  4 :  393.     C.  708. 

Sun-smitten.     Ger.  de  L.  6 :  349. 
C.  973. 

Fust,  6:377.     C.  984.     74. 

Sun-star.     R.  &  B.  3 :  386.     C.  565. 
Sun-suffused.     R.  &B.3:392.    C. 
5(W.     35. 

■—  Prol.  Fif .  4 :  382.     C.  701. 

Sun-surpassing.     Shah  A.  6 :  244. 

C.  931. 
Sun  -  threads.     Joch.  6 :  215.      C 

920.     166. 
Sun-touched.    Inn  A,  5 :  244.     C. 

774. 
Sun-treader.     Pau.  1:6.     C  4. 

Pau.  1 :  25.     C.  11.     16. 

Sun-warm.     Pau.  1 :  18.     C.  8. 
Sun -warmed.     Joch.  6:226.     C. 

924. 
Sun-warmth.     Inn  A.  5:270.     C. 
784. 

Numph.  5 :  347.     C.  813. 

Suns.      Ned  B.  6:147.     C.  890. 

100. 
Sunbeam-shafts.    Ari.   A.  5:212. 

C.  671. 
Sunbeams.     Saul,  2:48.     C.  180. 

Sundawn.     Sor.    1:  216.     C.    84. 

23. 
Sunflower.   Rudel,4:123.    C.361. 


Surplice-question 
R.&B.  3:22.3.     C.  503, 

c. 
c. 


Sunrise. 

248. 
Sunrise-aim.    Pambo,   6:237 

928. 
Sunscreen.    R.   &   B.  3:3(36, 

Sunset.      Para.     1 :  118,      C,   47, 

64. 
Sunset-closes.    Ari.  A.  5:104.     C. 

6;io. 

Sunset  -  touch.     Bishop   B.   4:96. 

C.  2^. 
Sunshine.      Red    Cott.   5:1.      C. 

7;}(3._   279. 
Sunshine-minutes.     Pippa,  1 :  327. 

C.  129. 
Sunspot-portent,    Ari,   A.   5 :  132. 

C.  (541. 
Super -sweet,      R,  &  B,  3:332. 

C.  545. 
Superadded.     Ber.  de  M,  6:301, 

C.  954. 
Superhuman.    Sor.  1 :  292.    0.114. 

175:  .   .     . 

Supenmposure.      An.   A.   5:  134. 

C.  642. 
Supermundane.    Fifine,  4:432.    C 

729. 
Supersubtle,    Ber.  de  M.  6:302. 

C.  955. 
Supper.    R.  &  B.  3:  406.     C.  573. 

222. 
Supper-summons.     Red  Cott.  5 .  6. 

C.  738.     99. 
Supplants.    Balau.  4:322.    C,625. 

96. 
Suppressed.     Ari.  A.   5  : 1(35.     C. 
(»4.     265. 

Chris.  Sm.  (i :  315.     C,  960. 

192, 
Supremacy.     R.  &  B.  3 :  401.     C. 

571.     229. 
Sure.     A  Blot,  2:176.     C.  229. 

47- 
SureUer.    Sor.  1 :  319.     C.  125. 
Surface-blank.     Ger.  de  L.  6  :  346. 

C.  971.     61. 
Surface-growth.    Ari.   A.   5  :  138. 

C.  643,     75, 
Surface-paint,    In  a  B.  4  :  134,    C. 

3()5, 
Surface-shield,    Fifine,  4: 429.    C. 

728, 
Surge.    Sor.  1 :  194.     C.  75.     181. 
Surgery.     Family,  6 :  247.     C.  932. 

132. 
SurpUce  -  question.     Chris,  -  Eve, 

4:20.     C,  323. 


487 


Surplusage 


INDEX 


Sympathies 


Surplusage.     R.  &  B,  3:  176.     C. 

4S4.     53- 
Surprise.     Pippa,  1 :  356,     C.  140. 

68. 
Luria,    2:396.        C.    313, 

254. 
R.    &   B.   3:96,       C.   452. 

77- 
R.    &    B,   3:371.     C.  559. 

194. 
Fiime,    4  :  425.        C.     725. 

193- 
Surview,       Rev,   6  :  4.35  ;    7  :  104, 

C.  1005. 
Survive.     Cleon,  4:121.     C.  361, 

47- 

Ari.   A,    5:231,     C.    677, 

76. 
Survived.     Chris,-Eve,   4:19.     C, 

323.     69. 
Survivor's-tribute,    Ari.  A.  5 :  128, 

C.  (;40. 
Suspected.    Bean -St.  6:275.     C. 

943,     II. 
Suspire.     Chris.  -  Eve,  4 :  14.     C. 

321. 
Suspired.       Serenade,   2:  73,      C. 

189.     60. 
Sustained.     Inn  A.  5:306,    C.798, 

155. 
Swan-fashion,     Agam.  6 :  44,     C 

&46, 
Swan -like.     Ari.  A.  5:199.     C. 
667. 

Pietro,  6 :  169.     C.  900. 

Swan-notions,     Pietro,  6: 170,     C. 

900,     247. 
Swan-shaped.    Pietro,  6: 169,     C. 

900, 
Swan-soft.     Para.  1 :  56.     C.  23. 
Swans.     Pietro,  6 :  170.     C,  900, 
Swang.     Shop,  5:340.     C.  810, 
Sward.      Bifur.   5:347.      C.   812. 

I86, 
Swarm.    Imp.  Aug.  6:  426  ;  7:  85. 

c.  vm.  42. 

Swart-green.      Pippa,    1 :  344,     C 

1.35. 
Swarth-skinned.     R.  &  B.  3:172. 

C.  482, 
Swathe-bands,    Agam,  6 :  49,     C 

848 
Sweat-drops.    Sor.  1 :  303,    C.  118. 
Sweat-service.      R.  &  B,   3:446, 

C  590.     20. 
Swedenborg.    Sludge,  4 :  237.     C. 

404. 
Sweep-net.    Agam.  6:13,     C835, 


Sweepy,    Chris,  -  Eve,  4:11,    C 

320, 
'  Sweet.'    Ari.  A.  5 :  156.     C.  651 , 

103.     146. 
Sweet.    R.  &  B.  3:436,     C,  586. 

137- 

Inn  A.  5:279,    C,  787,    234. 

Sweet-sour.     Sor.  1 :  232,     C.  90, 
Sweets.    King  V.  1 :  389.     C.  153. 

255. 
Swift-footed.     Pau.  1 :  9.     C.  5. 
Swift  -  recurring.      Pippa,    1 :  339. 

C.  133. 
Swigging.     Ari.  A.  5 :  116.    C  635. 
Swim.    Fifine,4:38S.    C,  704.    68. 
Swine.       Fust,   6:381.       C.  985. 

213. 
Swine-hke.    R.  &  B.  3:437.     C, 

586,     98. 
Swine's-neck,    Ari.  A.  5 :  2^34.     C. 

678. 
Swinging  -  time.     Ned  B.  6:145. 
_  C.  8«9. 
Swooning-sphere.    Sor.  1 :  306,    C. 

119.     180. 
Sword.     Kmg  C.  1 :  411,     C,  162, 
42. 

R.    &   B.  3:378,      C,  562, 

"9. 

R.   &  B,  3:474.     C.  600. 

256. 

Balau,4:280,    C.  609,   214. 

Ceneiaja,   5:373,      C,   823. 

124. 
Ber.  de  M.  6 :  296.     C.  952. 


124. 
Sword-arm.     Sor.  1 :  30.3.     C.  118. 
Sword-blade-smith.  Ari.  A.  5 :  159. 

C.  652. 
Sword-destroying.      Agam.   6:47. 

C.  847. 
Sword-hand.     R.   &  B.   3:382. 

C.  5&4. 
Swords.       Saul,    2 :  48.       C.    180. 

173- 
Swordsman 's-gear.     L'.iria,  2 :  366, 

C.  301. 
Swordsman's-pay.     Luria,  2 :  378, 

C.  .305. 
Sycamine.    Joch.  6:221.     C.  922. 
Synipathetic.    Sludge,  4 :  224.     C. 

398.     28. 
Sympathy.     Para.  1:28.      C.  12. 
12. 

Ari.    A.   5:104.      C.  630. 

119. 


Sympathies.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  355.    C 
297.    3. 
488 


Sympathize 


Sympathize.    In  a  B.  4:147.     C. 

370.     140. 
Sympathizing.      R.  &   B,   .3:352. 

C.  552.     97. 
Symphyses.     R.&B.  3:410.     C. 

575. 
Syntax.    Flight,  2:305.     C.  277. 

198. 


Tabby.    Ned  B.  6: 144.     C.  888. 
Table-edge.     R.  &  B.  3:28.     C. 

425. 
Table-foot.    R.  &  B.  3:150.     C. 

474. 
Table-land.    R.  &  B.  3:148.     C. 

473.     229. 
Table-top.     Inn  A.  5 :  254.    C.  778. 
Tablet.      R.   &  B.    3:  371.       C. 

559.     156. 
Tablet-book.     Ari.  A.  5:232.     C. 

677. 
Tablet-votive.    Chris.-Eve,   4 :  24. 

C.  324. 
Tabret-girls.     Druses,  2 :  111.     C. 

203. 
Tact.     R.  &  B.  3:197.     C.  492. 

Tadpole  -  frog  -  theory.      Fifine, 

4:433.     C.  729. 
Tag-rag.    Ned  B.  6: 143.     C.  887. 
Tahmasp.      Shah  A.  6:244.      C. 

931. 
Tail-splash.    Ari.  A.  5 :  118.     C. 

636. 
Tail-tips.    Fifine,  4:. 399.     C.  710. 
Tail -twist.     Ari.  A.  5:125.     C. 

638. 
Taint-worms'.     Sor.    1:310.      C. 

121. 
Take.     King  C.   1:407.     C.  160. 
136. 

Piol.   Fer.  6:240.     C.  929. 

133- 
Take-away.      Fifine,  4:  423.      C. 

724. 


INDEX 
Talk 


Taste 


J.  Lee,    4:  156.      C.  374. 
288. 

Inn  A.  5 :  .313.     C.  801.  83. 

Talks.      Apol.   &   F.  6:288.  C. 

!I49.     138. 

Talkers.     Pippa,   1:330.     C.  130. 


Fifine,  4:397.     C. 


Takings-up.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  339.    C. 

2fM). 
Tale.     R.  &  B.  3:126,     C.  464. 

283. 
Talent.     Soul's    Tr.  2:357.      C. 

29S.     40. 
Talk.     Para.  1 :  73,     C.  30,     278. 

Para.  1 :  99.     C.  40.    260. 

R.   &   B,  3:348.     C.  551. 

241, 

V. 

489 


235. 
Tallow-rush 

70<t. 

Tame.    Eas.-Day,  4:55.     C  33.5. 
^47- 
Tandem-lasher.     Likeness,  4 :  220. 

C.  396. 
Tang.    How  it  S.  4:59.     C.  336. 

61. 
Taimage.     Flight,  2:  291.     C.  271. 
Tap.     Red   Cott.   5:51.     C.  755. 

281, 
Tap-root.     Bean -St.   6:275.     C. 

943. 
TaiJ-tap.    Paech.  5:  330.     C.  806. 
Taper.     Sludge,  4 :  243.     C.  406, 

Apol.  &  F.  6:  291.     C.  951. 

202. 
Taper-fires.    Chris.-Eve,  4 :  14.    C 

321. 
Taper-shine.     Red  Cott.  5 :  56.    C. 

151. 
Taper-wick.    R.  &  B.  3:65.     C. 

439. 
Tapers.     R.  &  B.  3:  247.     C.  512. 

221 

Tares!      Bar.  de  M.  6:298.     C. 

953.     63. 
Targimis.    Joch.  6:214.     C.  919. 
Tarns.     Para.  1 :  40.     C,  17. 
Tarocs.    R.  &  B.  3:  463.     C.  596. 
Tarrier.     Glove,  2:249.     0.257. 
Tarriers.     R.  &  B.  3: 15,     C.  420. 

249. 
Tarriers -at -home.      Ger.   de   L. 

():345.     C.  971. 
Tartaros  -  doomed.     Ixion,   6:211. 

C.  918. 
Task.    Para.  1 :  57.     C.  24.    254. 

Glove,  2:  249.    C.257.    269. 

R.  &   B.  3:188.      C.   489. 

246. 


Task  -  master's.    Serenade,  2 :  74. 

C.  I'.R). 
Tasks.    Ari.  A,  5:120.     C.  636. 

284, 
Tasked.    Para.  1:68.     C.  28.     61. 
Tassel-tipt.    Red  Cott.   5:6.     C 

738. 
Taste.    Childe  R.  2 :  333.     C.  287. 

209. 


Taste 
Taste. 


INDEX 
C.  637 


Ari.  A.   5:  123. 

6i. 
Epil.  Pacch.  5 :  394.    C.  829. 

158. 
Tastes.      Karsh.   4:67.       C.   339. 

241. 
Pict.    Ig.   4:74.       C.   342. 

274. 
Tatter.    R.  &  B.  3: 134.     C.  468. 
Taught.     R.  &  B.  3:  290.     C.  529. 

155. 

Chris. -Eve,  4:7.     C.   318. 

197. 

Dev.   6  :  430  ;    7  :  93.       C. 

1003.     84. 
Taurello  Salinguerra.     Sor.  1 :  199, 

C.  77. 
Taurello-sprite.     Sor.  1:247.     C. 

96. 
Tavern-doors.      R.   &   B.   3 :  175. 

C.  484. 
Tavem-fare.      Red  Cott.   5:48. 

C.  754. 
"Tavistock's    Pym."      Chas.  A. 

6 :  364.     C.  978. 
Tax.     R.  &   B.  3 :  10.      C.  418. 

175- 
Teach.      Inn  A.   5:272.     C.    785. 

123. 
Teaches.     Lrion,   6:208.     C.   916. 

225. 
Teaching.    Death  in  D.  4 :  197.    C. 

388.     81. 
Teapot-tempests.    Inn  A.  5  :  261. 


C.  414. 
C.  425. 
C.  444. 


eapc 

C.  780. 


Tear.     R.   «fe  B.   3 :  1. 

3 :  27. 
3:  77. 


271. 
R.   &  B. 


153- 
R.   ct   B 

205. 
Tear-shot.     !Sor.  1 :  255.     C.  99. 
Tears.     Para.  1:50.     C.21.     291. 
R.  &  B.  3:183.      C.  487. 

150- 
Too  Late,  4:180.     C.  381. 

19. 
Confess.   4  :  214.       C.  394. 

59.     268. 
Ixion,     6:207.        C.     916. 

91. 
Tedium.      R.   &  B.  3 :  335.      C. 

54G      121 
Teeth.    Serenade,  2  :  75.     C.   190. 

89. 

Karsh.  4:  70.    C.  340.    109. 

One  Word,  4 :  128.     C.  363. 

114. 


Temptation 
C.  542. 


Teian.    R.  &  B.  3 :  325 

15- 
TeU.    R.   &  B.  3:449.     C.  591. 

93. 
TeU-tale.    Pippa,  1 :  355.     C.  140, 
43- 

R.  &  B.  3 :  88.     C.  448. 

Temperance.    Ari.  A.  5 :  113.     C. 

<333.     80. 
Temple.    R.  «fe  B.  3 :  370.     C.  559, 

Temple  -  building.       Two    Poets, 

6  :  >S0.     C.  860. 
Temple-column.     Ben  K,   6  :  385. 

C.  372. 
Temple-door.    Two  Poets,   6  :  95. 

C.  86(;.    75. 
Temple-gates.      Para.  1 :  97.      C. 

39. 
Temple-home.     Balau.  4  :  325.     C. 

62(;. 

Temple-pillar.     Joch.  6:212.     C. 

918. 
Temple-porch.     R.   &   B,   3:376. 

C.  561.    9. 
Temple-room.     R.&B.3:33.     C. 

427. 
Temple-service.     R.  &   B.  3:17. 

C.  421. 
Temple-step.     Ger.   de   L.  6:349. 

C.  972. 
Temple -throng.     Ari.  A.  5:230. 

C.  677. 
Temple-treated.    Red  Cott.  5: 16. 

C.  742. 
Temple-t^-pe.     Fifine,  4:432.      C. 

729.     204. 
Temple-wise.    Fifine,   4:438.      C. 

733. 
Temporal-supreme.   Pietro,  6: 178. 

C.  904.     210. 
Tempt.     Doctor,  6 :  185.      C.  908. 

III. 
Tempts.     Soul's  Tr.  2:338.      C. 
289.     135. 

R.    &    B.    3:39.      C.    429. 

291. 

Red    Cott.    5:2.      C.    737. 

274. 

St.   Mart.   5:353,     C.   814. 

230. 

La  S.  6 :  58.     C.  851.     81. 

Temptation.    Straf .  1 :  188.    C.  72. 
61. 

R.   &   B.   3:90.      C.    450. 

203. 

R.   &  B.   3:382,     C,  564, 

258, 


490 


Temptations 


INDEX 


Thief 


Temptations.     Luiia,   2  :  384.     C 

30H.     274. 
Tempter's.     R.  &  B.  3:428.     C. 

582.     25. 
Tempting.     Englishm.  2: 259.     C. 

2C0.     128. 
Ten.      Last    R.   2:280.      C.  961. 
239. 

Ben  Ezra,  4:189.     C.  385. 

103. 
Tender.      Para.    1:67.       C.    27. 

274. 
Tendril-twine.     Fifine,  4  :  417.     C. 

721. 
Tenebrific.    R.&B.3:85.   C.448. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  395.     C.  569. 

Tennis-court.    R.  &  B.  3:50.     C. 

434.     13. 
Tent -door.      Mul^y.  6:  ICG.      C. 

898. 
Tent-pegging.    Inn  A.  5 :  250.     C. 

776. 
Tent-roof.    Saul,  2  :  47.     C.  180. 
Tent-tree.    Para.  1 :  56.     C.  23. 
Tentatives.     Eas.-Day,  4 :  50.     C. 

333.     201. 
Tenure.     J.  Lee,  4 :  164.     C.  376. 

23-  . 
Terebinth-tree's.    La  S.  6 :  74.    C. 

858. 
Terence.     R.   &    B.  3:155.      C. 
476. 

R.   &   B.   3:282.     C.  526. 

271. 
Terentii.     Ivkn,  6 :  135.     C.  8S3. 
Term.     St.  Prax.  4  :  91.     C.  ;349. 
Terpander's.      Chris. -Eve,   4:16. 

a  321. 
Terrace  -  plants.     R.  &  B.  3:12. 

C.  419. 
Terrace-raU.    R.  &  B.  3:  203.     C 

495. 
Terrible.    R.  «feB.  3:56.     C.  436. 

261. 
Ten-or.     Prol.  A.  6 :  390 ;  7  :  2.     C. 

987.    25. 
Terror-stricken.     Ari.   A.  5  :  101. 

C.  629. 
Test.    Stat..&  B.  2 :  328.     C.  286. 
41. 

Bishop  B.  4:96.     C.  351. 

243. 
Testunony.     R.  &  B.  3:477.     C. 

601.     112. 
Tetchy.     R.  &  B.  3: 144.     C.  471. 

161. 
Tether.    Druses,  2:115.     C.  204. 

221. 


Tether.    EpLl.  Mihrab,  6 :  257.    C. 

936.     34. 

Fust,  6  :  377.     C.  984.     224, 

Tether's.    Pillar,  6 :  270.     C.  941. 

194. 
Tettix.    Phei.  6  :  124.     C.  877. 
Text.      SoUl.     2:  13.      C.     1(38. 

45- 
R.    &   B.  3:155.      C.  476. 

156. 
Thala-ssiau-pure.    R.  &  B.  3:340. 

C.  548. 
Thank.     Bean-St.  6 :  282.     C.  946. 

log. 

Fust,  6 :  377.     C.  983.     94. 

Thank-you.     Bishop  B.  4 :  105.    C. 

354. 
Thanks.    Mihrab,  6  :  255.     C.  936. 

178. 
Dan.  Bar.  6:305.     C.  956. 

214. 
Fr.    Fu.    6:333.      C.    966. 


Thankfuhiess.       Last   R.    2:279. 

C.  267.     19. 
Thanksgiving  -  dances.       Balau. 

4:321.     C.  625. 
Thaw.     Red  Cott.  5:57.     C.  758. 

248. 
Theatre.      R.    &   B.   3:470.      C. 

5!  IS.     187. 
Theft.     Inn  A.  5  :  258.     C.  779. 
Theme.    R.  &  B.  3:324.     C.  542. 

98. 
Themselves.     In  a  B.  4:139.     C. 

;567.     217. 
Theocrite.     Boy  &  Ang.   2:238. 

C.  253. 
Theodoric.    R.  &   B.  3:290.     C. 

529. 
Theorie.    Joch.  6  :  213.     C.  919. 
Theotypas.     Death  in  D.  4:193. 

C.  386. 
Theseus.      Artemis,     4:61.        C 

;>57. 

Thiek-ankled.    R.  &B.  3:3.     C. 

415. 
Thick-foliaged.    Sor.   1:252.      C. 

98. 
Thick-head.    Red  Cott.  5 :  30.    C. 

747. 
Thick-skuUed.     Para.   1 :  t^.      C. 

■'7 
Thick-steaming.    Sor.  1 :  21().     C. 

84. 
Tliickliest.      Pippa,    1 :  355.       C. 

140. 
Thief.    R.  &  B.  3 :  413.    C.  576. 


491 


Tien-chu 


INDEX 


Three-leaved 


Tien-chu.     R.   &  B.  3:391.      C. 

5(i7. 
Thiers-and-Victor-Hugo,      Prince 

H.  4  :  358.     C.  ti!l2. 
Tliiers-Hugo.      Prince  H.   4  :  358. 

C.  G92. 
ThiU- horse.     Pacch.  5:327.     C. 

805. 
Thin-lipped.    Druses,  2:104.      C. 

2()0. 
Thing.     Bar.  de  M.  6:299.     C. 

954        222 

Things.      Ben    Ezra,   4:187.      C. 

384.     8i. 
Ber.  de  M.  6 :  299.     C.  954. 

248. 
Tliuigumbob.    Holy-C.  2 :  317.    C. 

282. 
Think.    Woman's,  2  :  23.     C.  171. 


249- 
A    Blot,   2:177. 


C.    230. 

C.  287. 

C.    789. 

C. 

C.  423. 

C.  493. 


182 
Chikle  R.  2 :  333. 

229. 
Inn    A.     5:283. 

14. 
Tliinks.     Soul's  Tr.  2:350 

295.     185. 
R.   &    B.   3:21. 

229. 
R.   &  B.  3:199. 

191. 
Thinlier.     Flight,  2 :  300.     C.  275. 
Thii-st.    R.  &  B.  3:235.     C.  508. 

262. 
Chris.-Eve,  4  :  12.     C.  320. 

145- 
Thirst  -  quenching.      Fust,   6 :  369. 

C.  981. 
Thirst  -  unslaked.      Joch.    6 :  219. 

C.  921. 
Thirteen -years' -old.      R.    &   B. 

3:425.    'C.  581. 
This-and-that.    R.  &  B.  3 :  6.     C. 

416. 
This-day-year.     Fifine,  4 :  398.     C. 

710. 
Thistle-beards.    R.  &  B.  3:347. 

C.  551. 
Thistle-bunch.    Plot-C.  6 :  267.   C. 

940. 
Thistle-stalk.     ChUde  R.  2:332. 

C.  287. 
Thorn-bush.    R.  &  B.  3:  181.     C. 

486.     92. 
Thorn-rows.    Sor.  1 :  241.     C.  93. 
Thorold.     A    Blot,    2:149.       C. 

219. 


Thorough-bred.    R.  &  B.  3:295. 

C.  531.    61. 
Thoroughfares.     Sor.  1 :  262.      C 

102.     275. 
Thorpes.     Red   Cott.  5:10.      C. 

740. 
Thought.     Straf.   1 :  178.     C.  68. 
240. 

Sor.  1 :  297.     C.  116.    278. 

Last  R.  2  :  280.     C.  2(58.     2. 

Poi-ph.    2  :  329.        C.    286. 

144. 
Soul's  Tr.  2  :  358.     C.  298. 

243. 
Luria,     2  :  402.        C.    315. 

173. 

R.  &B.  3:17.    C.  421.    2. 

R.  &  B.  3  :  31.     C.  42(5.     2. 

R.  &  B.  3:147.      C.  473. 

I. 
R.  &  B.  3:186.      C.  487. 

251- 

Ari.   A.   5  :  100.       C.  628. 

233. 
Thought-absorbed.    Balau.  4 :  306. 

C.  619. 
Thought-borne.      Ari.   A.   5:100. 

C.  628. 
Thought  -  immersed.        Pambo, 

6  :  236.     C.  928.     243. 
Thoughts.     Para.   1:91.      C.   37. 
206. 

R.  &  B.  3:199.      C.  493. 

259. 

Red  Cott.  5:75.     C.  765. 

2.     189. 

Which,   6:401;    7:28.     C. 

991.     50. 
Thoughtliugs.   EpU.  Pacch.  5 :  393. 

C.  829. 
Thousand.     Boy  &   Ang.  2:239. 

C.  254.     46. 
Thousand-headed.     Ari.  A.  5  :  190. 

C.  664. 
Thousand-sailored.      Agam.   6 :  5. 

C.  832. 
Thrashing-block.     Ari.  A.  5 :  158. 

C.  651. 
Three  -  banked  -  ships.      Ari.    A. 

5 :  115.     C.  634. 
Three-bodied.    Ari.  A.  5:191.    C. 

664. 
Three-crest.    Ari.  A.  5:115.     C. 

634. 
Three-headed.    Ari.  A.  5  :  220.   C. 

673. 
Three -leaved.     Sor.  1:222.      C. 

86. 


492 


Three-legged  INDEX 

R.   &  B.  3:110. 
C. 


Three  -  legged 

C.  458. 
Three-obol.    Ari.   A.   5:131. 

(341. 
Three-parts.    R.  &  B,  3 :  338.     C. 

.547. 
Three-pile.    Two  Poets,  G :  98.     C. 

8()7. 
Three-shaped.    Ari.  A,  5:180.    C. 

(j(30. 
Three -share.     Agam.   6:26.      C. 

840. 
Three-stringed.     Red  Cott.  5:93. 

C.  1T2. 
Three -times.      Prince  H.  4:343. 

C.  686. 
Three  -  years.      Camel-D.    6 :  259. 

C.  937.     281. 
Threshold  -  stone.      Chris.  -  Eve, 

4:14.     C.  321. 
Threshold-streak.     R.  &  B.  3:  14. 

C.  420. 
Thrice.     R.  &  B.  3  :  166.     C.  480. 

174- 
Thrice-accurst.     Ivkn,  6 :  136.     C. 

8S4 
Thrice-bound.    Ned  B.  6: 147.'   C. 

890.     257. 
Thrice-noble.     Soul's  Tr.   2:347. 

C.  293. 
Thrice    -    preeautioned.       Pippa, 

1 :  354.     C.  140. 
Thrice-refined.     R.  &   B.  3:123. 
C.  463.     173. 

;—  Prince  H.  4 :  360.     C.  693. 

Thrice-removed.     R.  &  B.  3:91. 

C.  450.     86. 
Thrice-renowned.    Sor.  1 :  226.    C. 

88. 
Thrice-sage,      Pippa,    1 :  354.      C 

140. 
Thrice-silvery.     Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  322. 

C.  962. 
Thrice -six.      Agam.     6:  5.       C. 

831. 
Thrice-superfine.    Numph.  5 :  350. 

C.  814.     219. 
Thrice-throwing.    Agam.  6:  8.    C 

833. 
Thrice-transfigured.      One   Word, 

4:127.     C. '363. 
Thrice-venerable.    Artemis,  4 :  63. 

C  338 
Thrids.' '  Forgiv.  5 :  359.     C.  817. 
Thridded.     R.   &  B.  3:11.      C. 

419. 
Thriftless.    Chris.-Eve,  4:10.     C. 

319.     132. 


Thunder-stress 
C. 


Thrifty.    Pied  Piper,  2:285. 

•J7().     142. 
Thiill.      ,Sor.     1:  314.      C.     123. 
19. 

R.    &  B.  3:395.      C.   5439. 

46. 

Prince  H.  4:  354.     C.  091. 

170. 
Thrive.    Colombe,  2 :  182.    C.  231. 

40. 
Thriveless.     Para.   1:33.      C  14. 
238. 

Para.  1 :  115.     C.  45.    38. 

Tliroat.    Porph.   2:329.      C.  286. 


241. 
Throes.    J.  Lee,  4:161.     C.  375. 

18. 
Throne,    Chas.  A.  6:  361.     C.977. 

i6g. 
Throne-step.    Fr.Fu.  6:332.     C. 

9(i(;. 

Through,     Apol.  &  F,  6:  293.     C. 

951.     191. 
Thrush -eggs.      Sor.    1:267.      C. 

104. 
Thrush -songs.     Flute-M.   6:423; 

7  :  78.     C.  1000. 
Thrust.      Childe    R.   2:332,      C. 

287.     243. 
Thucydides.    R.  &  B.  3:  344.     C. 

550. 
Thumb.     Her.   Trag.  2:315.     C. 
281.     229. 

Ben  Ezra,  4 :  189.     C.  385. 

286. 

Red  Cott.  5 :  15.     C.  742. 

Thumb-nail.     Red  Cott.  5:  7.     C. 

739. 
Thurabkin.       Fust,     6:369.        C. 

980. 
Thump-thump.     Chris.-Eve,   4 :  6. 

C.  318. 
Thunder-cloud.     Sor.   1 :  316.      C 

123. 
Thunder  -  flame.      Balau.   4:276. 

C.  (;o7. 

Thunder-free.     Pippa,  1 :  344.     C. 

135. 
Tliunder-pealed,    La  8.6:59.     C. 

851. 
Thunder-phrase.     Sor.  1:195.     C. 


Two    Poets, 


Thunder  -  smitten. 

() :  84.     C.  862. 
Thunder-stone.    Agam,  6: 16.     C. 

8;5(>. 
Thunder-stress.    Two  Poets,  6 :  90. 
C.  864, 
493 


Thunder-striking 


IXDEX 


Pretty  W. 


Thunder  -  striking. 

2:7.S.     C.  l!tl. 
Thunder-strong.    Ivkn,6:137.    C 

8S4. 
Thundergirt.       Joh.    Agri.   4:  71, 

C.  Ail.     93. 
Thwart.       Sor.   1 :  314. 
193. 

In   a    B.   4:  139. 

276. 

Chiis.  Sm.  6:318 

7. 
Thwarted.     Sor.   1:297. 


C.  122. 
C.  3G7. 
C.  513. 
C.  116. 
C.   89. 


139. 
Thwarting.     Sor.  1:230, 

188. 
Thj-Tsis.    R.  &  B.  3 :  157.     C.  ill. 

52- 
Tiburzio.     Luria.  2:374.     C.  304. 
Tic-toe.    Two  Poets,  6:  105.     C. 

870. 
Tick.    R.  &  B.  3:150.     C.  474. 
64. 

Now,  6 :  392 ;  7 : 8.     C.  988. 

149. 
Tick-bite.    Joch.  6:  227.     C.  924. 
Ticked.     R.  &  B.  3:2;  3:3.     C. 

415.     71. 
Tickens.      Master  H.   2:95.      C. 

Ticket-money.     Red  Cott.  5:11. 

C.  740. 
Tickles.     Plot-C.  6:267.     C.  940. 

179. 
Tide.    Thro'  Met.  2:6.     C.  165. 
208. 

R.    &  B.  3:56.      C.  436. 

168. 
Tigei-cats.    R.  &  B.  3:441.     C. 

588. 
Tiger-flash,     Inn  A.   5:31.3.      C. 

801. 
Tiger-smack.    Red  Cott.  5:8.    C. 

739. 
Tight-hooped.    Mar.  Rel.  6:118. 

C.  875. 
Tight-tie.     Ivkn,  6:1.35.     C.  883. 
TiU-ward.    Shop,  5:  MO.     C.  810. 
Time.     Para.  1 :  35.     C.  15.     172. 

Sor.  1 :  209.     C.  81.    38. 

Sor.  1 :  240.     C.  93.     170. 

Sor.  1 :  318.     C.  124.     157. 

King  V.   1 :  392.      C.   154. 

204. 

Gram.  Fun.  2 :  311.     C.  280. 

84. 

Luria,     2:394,        C.    312. 

281. 


Title 

Time.     Luria,  2:  400.       C.    314. 

273. 
R.   &   B.  3:37,       C.  429. 

274. 
R.   &  B.  3:138.     C.  469. 

261. 
R.   &  B.  3:301.      C.  533. 

23- 

In  a  B.  4 :  147.     C.  370.    41. 

Death  in    D.   4 :  197.       C. 

.-W.S.     81. 
Prince  H.  4:365.     C.  695. 

214. 
Ari.   A.  5:239,      C,    681. 

69. 
St.  Mart.  5:352.     C.  814. 

99. 

Joch.  6:  219,     C.  921.    44. 

EpU.  Fer.  6:283.     C.  946, 

50. 
Time-wiling.     Para.  1 :  45.     C  19. 
Time's.    R.  &  B.  3:  214.     C.  499. 
208. 

Ben  Ezra,  4 :  190.     C.  385. 

191. 

Camel-D.   6:259.      C.   937. 

131. 
Times.    Sor.  1:. 314.    C.  122.    210. 
Timely.    Sludge,  4 :  252.     C.  410. 

134- 
Tin-islands.     Ari.   A.   5:227.     C. 

675. 
Tinglish.     Old  Pict.  2 :  43.    C.178. 
Tinsel -flag.      Fifine,   4:434.      C. 

730. 
Tinselled.      Ari.  A.  5 :  117.      C. 

635.     280. 
Tintacks.    Flight,  2 :  305.     C.  277. 

ig8. 
Tip.      Sludge,   4:226.       C.    399. 

248. 
Tip-top.    R.  &  B.  3: 109.    C.  457. 
Tiptoe.    R.&B,  3:284.    C.  527. 

62. 
Tire.     Chas.  A.  6:360.     C.  977. 

185, 
Tired.    Red  Cott.  5:6.     C.  738. 
226. 
Clive,6:157.     C.  894.    256. 


Tiring-room.    Boy  &  Ang.  2 :  240. 

C.  254. 
'  Tirititototo.'     Bea.  Sig.  6:414; 

7  :  62.     C.  9f»7. 
Tit-for-tat.     Chas.  A.  6  :  355.     C. 

975. 
Titanically.    Eas.-Day,  4 :  50.     C. 

.333. 
Title.    Fifine,  4: 405.    C.714.    48. 
494 


Title-deed  INDEX 

R.  &  B.  3 :  3S0.     C, 
3 :  150.      C. 


Toped 


Title-deed, 

507. 
Tittup.      E.    &    B 

474. 
To-come.     Sor.  1 :  306.     C.  119. 

Sor.  1 :  311.     C.  121. 

In  a  B.  4  :  132.     C.  364. 

To-day.     Death  in  D.  4  :  204.     C. 
391.     163. 

Epil.   Mihrab,   6:256.      C. 

93().     255. 
To-do.      Fra    Lippo,  4:76.      C. 

343. 
To  -  morrow.     Flute  -  M.  6 :  421 ; 

7 :  74.     C.  999.     290. 
To-rights.    Straf.   1 :  185.     C.  71. 

215. 
Toad.    R.   &  B.  3:63.     C.  439. 
108. 

Gold  H.  4 :  168.     C.  378. 

Toad's  -  head  -  squeeze.    R.  &  B. 

3  :  173.     C.  483. 
Toast.       Don.  6  :  198.       C.  913. 

132. 
Tobit.     R.  &  B.  3 :  312.     C.  538. 
Tohu-bohu.    Joch.  6 :  231.    C.  926. 

73. 
Toil.    Pau.  1:4.     C.  3.    269. 

Para.  1 :  47.     C.  20.    34- 

Para.  1 :  52.     C.  22.     207. 

Para.  1 :  57.     C.  24.     196. 

Doctor,    6  :  181.       C.   906. 

131. 

Bean-St.   6  :  274.      C.   943. 

203. 
Toil-weary.    Epil.  Plot-C.  6:267. 

C.  940. 
Toiled.     R.&B.  3:312.     C.  538. 

no. 
Toll-booth.    Colombe,  2  :  185.     C. 

233. 
Tom-fool.     R.  &  B.  3:429.      C. 

583. 
Tomans.    Sun,  6  :  250.     C.  933. 
Tomb.    R.&B.  3:187.     C.  489. 

R.  &    B,  3:370.      C.  559. 

152. 

Fra   Lippo,  4 :  75.     C.  342. 

81. 
Tomb-top.    R.  &  B.  3:  175.     C. 

484. 
Tommati.     R.  &  B.  3:22,      C. 

423, 
Tommy-make-  room  -  f  or-your-Un- 

cle.    Pacch.  5 :  330.     C.  807. 
Tongue.  .  Straf,  1 :  185.      C.  71, 

90. 


Tongue.     Flight,  2 :  296.     C.  274. 
Soul's   Tr.  2  :  338.     C.  289. 

41. 
Soul's  Tr.  2  :  :yi.     C.  291. 

232. 
K.    &   B.   3:221.      C.  502. 

258. 
Ari.   A.   5  :  i;58,       C,   643. 

Ari.   A.   5  :  140.       C.  644. 

^79. 
Tongue-broad.     Fifine,  4  :  423.    C. 

724. 
Tongue-leaved.      R.  &  B.  3:73. 

C.  443. 
Tongue-talk.    Ari.  A.  5  :  105.     C. 

631. 
Tongue  -  taunts.     Ari.   A.  5  :  220. 

C.  (i73. 
Tongue-tie.     Apol.    &   F.   6:292. 

C.  951. 
Tongue-tied.    Ari.  A.  5 :  101.     C. 

629, 
Toni.     R.  Brown,  C.  947. 
Too-abstemious.  Two  Cam.  6 :  261. 

C.  93S. 
Too-ingcuuous.     R.  &   B.   3:338. 

C.  547. 
Too  -  long  -  opened.       Pied  Piper, 

2  :  283.     C.  2(i9. 
Too-much.    Chris.-Eve,  4 :  10.    C. 

319. 
Too-much-tried.    Red  Cott.  5 :  25. 

C.  74(). 
Too-pampered.    Two  Poets,  6:  78. 

C.  859. 
Too-parsimonious.    R.  &  B.  3 :  349. 

C.  551. 
Too-prolonged.    Joch.  6  :  217.     C 

920. 
Too-refined.     R.  &  B,  3  :  7.     C. 

417. 
Tool.    Childe  R.  2 :  334.     C.  288. 
256. 

R.   &  B.  3:305.     C.   5X5. 

31- 
Tooth.     Red  Cott.  5  :  24.     C.  745. 

255. 
Tooth-Uke.    R.  &  B.  3:387,     C. 

566.     30. 
Tootle  -  te  -  tootle.      Up  —  Down, 

2:;}4.     C.  174. 
Toi)-hair.      R.  &  B.  3:115.      C. 

459.    31. 
Top-tuft.    Bean  -  St.  6  :  275.     C. 

943. 
Toped.    Epil.  Pacch.  5:300.     C, 

828, 


495 


Topiary  INDEX 

Red  Cott.  5 :  86.      C. 


Topiaiy 

7()i». 
Topple.    R.   &  B.  3:7.     C.  417. 

197. 
Torch.    R.  &  B.  3:396.     C.  569. 

268. 
R.   &  B.  3:454.     C.  593. 

45- 
Torch  -  blaze.      Agam.   6:4.      C. 

831. 
Torch-display.    Ari.  A.  5 :  175.  C. 

658. 
Torch -flame.     Para.  1:101.      C. 
40.     68. 

Sor.  1 :  195.     C.  75. 

Torch-holdiiigs.    Agam.  6 :  26.    C. 

840. 
Torch-light.    R.  &  B.  3:  372.     C. 

560. 
Torchlight.-   Ari.   A.  5:114.      C. 

634.     246. 
Tordinona    -    prison.       Cenciaja, 

5 :  .372.     C.  822. 
Torment.     Ixion,  6:210.     C.  917. 

201. 
Torn-out.     Flight,  2 :  291.     C.  272. 

268. 
Torpor.      R.    &    B.    3:  397.      C. 

570. 
Tortoise-shell.     Ari.  A.  5:199.    C. 

667. 
Torture.     Fifine,  4:397.     C.  709. 

282. 
Inn    A.     5:31.3.       C.    801. 

83. 
Torture-engine.      R.  &   B.  3:23. 

C.  423. 
Torture-engine's.    Count  G.  2 :  236. 

C.  253. 
Torture -irons.     R.  &   B.  3:188. 

C.  489.     262. 
Torture-place.      Red  Cott.   5:60. 

C.  759. 
Tosspot-feather.    Nat.  in  D.  2 :  8. 

C.  166. 
Tosspots.     Fust,  6:  369,     C.  980. 
Touch.    R.  &  B.  3  :  45.     C.  432. 

134- 
Red    Cott.    5:5.      C.   738. 

91. 
Touch,     6:191.       C.    910. 

230. 
EpU.  Pillar,  6 :  271.     C.  942. 

30. 
Touch-free.  Bea.  Sig.  6 :  413;  7 :  59. 

C.  f»96. 
Touched.     R.   &  B.  3:276.      C. 
524.    211. 


Tracking 

Inn  A.  5:271.     C.  784. 
Pacch.   5:330. 


Touched. 

22. 
Tough  -  gristled. 

C.  806. 
Tough-hided.    Ari.  A.  5 :  143.     C. 

(J45. 
Tough  -  tendoned.      Ber.    de    M. 

6  :  298.     C.  953. 
Tough  -  thonged.      Fifine,   4:394. 

C.  708. 
Tourney-regulations.    Two  Poets, 

6:91.     C.  864. 
Tournon.     R.   &   B,   3:391.      C. 

567 
Toused.     Sib.   Schaf.  2:11.      C. 

I(i7. 
Tower.    R.  &  B.  3:  370.     C.  559. 
152. 

Helen's  T.  6:367.    C.  601. 

149. 
Towers.    Luria,   2:392.     C.  311. 


R.   &  B.  3:43.     C.  431. 
Red  Cott.  5 :  22.     C. 


19. 
Town. 

242. 
Town-dross. 

744, 
Town-hangman.    R.  &  B.  3:  358. 

C.  554. 
Town-life.      Inn  A.  5:302.      C. 

797.     291. 
Town-talk.     R.  &  B.  3:62.     C. 
439.     15. 

R.   &  B.   3:260.     C.  518. 

207. 

Ari.  A.  5  :  149.       C.   648. 

204. 
Town -tongues.    Old  Pict.  2:43. 

C.  178. 
Town-wall.    R,  &  B,  3:304.     C. 

535 
Toy. 'R.&B.  3:427.     C.  581. 
Toy-cult.     Bea.  Sig.  6 :  418  ;  7 :  67. 

C.  999.     89. 
Toy-trifles.    R.&B.  3:171.     C. 

4S2. 
Toys.        Para.     1 :  45.       C.     19. 

237. 
Tozzi.     R.&B.  3:348.     C.  551. 
Trabea.    Sor.  1:291.     C.  113. 
Trace -horse.     Agam.  6:25.      C. 

840. 
Traces.      Para.     1:64.      C.    26. 
258. 

Para.  1 :  84.     C.  34.     54. 

Track.      Joch.    6:213.       C.    919. 

292. 
Tracking.     Chris.-Eve,  4:9.      C. 

319. 


496 


Tractile 


Mesmer.    2 :  245. 


Tractile 

200. 
Trade.    Straf .  1 :  172.     C.  m.    74. 

Sludge,    4:223.       C.     398. 

30. 

Shop,  5 :  341,     C.  810.    221 . 

Geo.  B.  D.  6:  319.     C.  961, 

239. 
Trade-mark.      Red   Cott,  5  :  22. 

C.  744.     257. 
Tradition.      K.   &   B.   3:75.      C. 

444.     251. 
Traffic-groove,    Shop,  5:338,     C. 

80'.). 
Traffic-taint.    Red  Cott.  5 :  22.    C. 

744. 
Tragedy.     Red  Cott.  5:17.      C. 

743.  .17. 
Train  -  oil  -  flasks.      Pied    Piper. 

2 :  285.     C.  209. 
Trained.    R.  &B.3:145.     C.472. 

259. 
Training.     R.   &   B.   3:387.      C. 

5(j(j,     136. 
Trait.     Fifine,    4:403.      C.    713. 

51- 

Trammel- trick.     Red  Cott.  5 :  5. 

C  738 
Trample".    Fust,  6:378.     C.  984. 

265. 
Transactions.    Red  Cott.  5 :  65,  C. 

761.     40. 
Transcendent.      Sor.    1 :  315.      C. 

123.     272. 
Transcribing.      R.  &  B.  3  :  194. 

C.  491.     26. 
Transfigured.     La  S.  6:58.      C. 

8.J1.     70. 
Transform.    Soul's  Tr,  2:  351.    C 

295.     120. 
Transformed.    R.  «S;  B.  3:  449.    C. 

591.     50. 
Transient.    Luria,2:402.     C.  315. 

78. 
Transit-time.     R.  &B.3:326.    C. 

542.     115. 
Translate.     H.  &   B.   3:312.      C. 

538.     167. 
Transmission.    R.&B.  3:458.    C. 

594.     218. 
Transpierce.    Red  Cott.  5 :  28.    C. 

746. 
Transport.      Ari.   A.   5:100.      C. 

628.     279. 
Trap-teeth,    R.   &  B,  3:30,     C. 

426. 
Travel,      Sor.    1:314.      C.    122, 

210, 


INDEX  Trees 

C.    Travel,    R,  &B,  3:.334,     C,  546. 
La   S.  6  :  56.     C. 
Karsh.   4 :  65.      C. 
Pietro,  6: 167. 


Travel 

165. 
Travel-book. 

850.     257. 
Travel-scrip. 

338. 
Travel  -  tattered 

C.  899. 
Travel-worn.    Epil.  Plot-C.  6 :  267. 

C.  940. 
Travelled.     R.   &   B,   3:285.     C. 

528.     8. 
Travellers.     Sor.   1:243.      C.  94. 
35- 

R.   &  B.  3:217.     C.  501, 

193. 
Travelling-sword,    R.  &  B.  3 :  283. 

C.  527. 
Treasure.    Sor.  1 :  247.     C.  96. 

Trans.  4:  57,     C335,    253. 

Fr.    Fu.    6:333.      C.    966, 

34- 


Treasure-book.    One  Word,  4 :  124. 

C.  3()2. 
Treasure-fortress.     Cleon,   4 :  120. 

C.  31)0. 
Treasure  -  freight.     Fifine,  4 :  416, 

C.  720.     221. 
Treasure  -  house.     Inn  A.  5 :  282. 

C.  788. 
Treasures.    Shop,  5:341.     C.  810. 

106. 
Treasured.     Dev.   6:430;    7:921. 

C.  1003.     78. 
Tree.     Woman's,   2:22.      C.   171. 
261. 

Luria,    2  :  394.       C.    312. 

18. 
Tree-buUt.     Fifine,  4:386.      C. 

703.  _ 
Tree-cinctured.    Two  Poets,  6 :  84. 

C.  862. 
Tree-heads.    Red  Cott.  5 :  14.     C. 

741. 
Tree-roots.     Para.  1 :  117.     C.  46. 

227. 
Tree  -  sprinkle.     Red  Cott.  5 :  17. 

C.  742. 
Tree  -  stump.     Soul's  Tr.   2 :  342. 

C.  291.     86. 
Tree-tent.    Sor.  1 :  :Mn.     C.  123. 
Tree-top-tuft.    R.  &  B.  3:  76.     C. 

444. 
Tree-tops.      Para.   l:iX>.      C.   36. 

279. 
Tree-topped.    Red  Cott.  5 :  13.   C. 

741. 
Trees.    DeGua.  2:45.     C.  178. 
497 


Tremble 


INDEX 


Tremble.    EpU.  Two  Cam.  6 :  263. 

C.  !«S.       107. 

Trembliiif?.     R.   &   B.  3:94.      C. 

451.     248. 
Trent.      Cardinal,    G:401;    7:30. 

C.  991.    41. 
Trentine  -  pass.     Sor.   1:211.      C. 

82. 
Tress-topped.    Balau.  4 :  294.     C. 

G14. 
Trial.      Luria,    2:387.       C.    309. 

38. 
Tribunitial.     Prince  H.  4 :  363.    C. 

(594. 
Tribute.    Ari.  A.  5:131.     C.  641. 

250. 
Tribute-bag.    Bean-St.  6 :  280.    C. 

i)45. 
Tribute-money.    Red  Cott.  5 :  77. 

C.  765.     188. 
Trick.    R.  &  B.  3:34.     C.  428. 
278. 

R.  &  B.  3  :  130.     C.  466. 

40. 

R.   &   B.   3:369.      C.  558. 

135. 

R.   &  B.  3:425.     C.  581. 

219. 
Trick-betrayer.    Flute-M.  6:  422  ; 

7 :  76.     C.  1000.     250. 
Tricks.     Para.  1:88.    C.  35.     160. 
Trickles.    Another  W.  2 :  76.     C. 

190. 
Trifle-treasure.   Fifine,  4:386.    C. 

703. 
Trifoly.    Sor.  1:238.     C.  92. 
Trine.      Apol.   &  F.   6:289.      C. 

950. 
Trined.    Sor.  1 :  274.     C.  107. 
Trip.       Luria,   2:  363.       C.   299. 

218. 
Trip-hook.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  345.     C. 

292. 
Triple-bodied.    Agam.  4:  26.     C. 

840. 
Triple-Crest.    Ari.  A.  5 :  152.     C. 

649. 
Triple  -  curded.     Sor.   1:263.     C. 

102. 
Triply  -  gross.    Agam.   6 :  46.     C 

84<). 
Trite.       Fifine,   4:440.      C.   734. 

57- 
Trithemius.  Para.  1 :  32.  C.  14. 
Triton.  R.  &  B.  3:  21.  C.  422. 
Tript-up.  Agam.  6:50.  C.  848. 
Tristful.  Paceh.  5:325.  C.  805. 
Triumph.    Sor.  1 :  118.    C.  47,    64. 


True 
C. 


Triumph.     R.   &   B.   3:  57. 

436.     113.     270. 
R.    &   B.   3:123.     C.   463. 

107. 
R.    &   B.   3:221.      C.  502. 

152. 
R.    &   B.  3:382.      C.  564. 

251. 
R.   &   B.  3:467.     C.  597. 

28. 
One  Word,  4 :  126.     C.  362. 

159. 

Pacch.5:323.     C.  804.    62. 

La  S.  6 :  66.     C.  855.    72. 

La  S.  6 :  67.     C.  855.     287. 

Mary   W.   6:206.     C.   916. 

195- 
Triumph-chant.     Ari.   A.   5 :  199. 

C.  667. 
Triumph-morning.     Luria,  2:396. 

9.312. 
Triumph-night.      Ari.   A.   5 :  116. 

C.  (i35. 
Triumph-praise.    Agam.  6:8.     C. 

833. 
Triumph-season.    Ari.   A.  5 :  168. 

C.  655. 
Triumphant.    Ari.  A.  5:113.     C. 

633.     69. 
Ber.  de  M.  6:  297.     C.  953. 

288. 
Trod.       R.  &  B.  3:8.      C.   417. 

128. 
Troth-plights.     Agam.  6:26.     C. 

840. 
Trouble.     Luria,  2:398.     C.  313. 

187. 
Ari.   A.  5:240.       C.  681. 

139. 
Troubled.     Pau.  1 :  13.     C.  7.     89. 
Trover.      Sib.   Schaf.   2:11,      C. 

1()7, 
Troy. 


R.   & 

B.  3: 

339. 

C. 

547, 

269. 

)ev.    6 

:428 

7: 

89. 

C, 

1002. 

Troy-town.     R,   &  B.   3:55.     C. 

436. 
Troy -ward,      Fifine,   4:393.      C, 

707. 
Truchman.    Sor.  1 :  226.     C.  88. 
Truckle-bed.    How  it  S.  4:60. 

C.  337. 
True.    Sor.  1 :  209.     C.  81.     143. 
R.  &  B.  3:229.      C.  606. 

58. 
R.  &  B.  3:231,      C.  506, 

275- 


498 


True  INDEX  Truth 

True.     R.   «S;B.  3:264,     C.   519.  Trust.    Sum.    Bon.  G:  ,193 ;  7:11. 

262.  C.  988.     125.     264. 
R.    &   B.   3:318.     C.   540.  Trustful.     Ber.  de  M,  G  :  302.     C, 

59.  955.     155. 
Bishop   B.   4:93.      C.  350.  Truth.     Para.  1 :  43.     C.  18.     65. 

290.  Para.  ]  :  44.     C.  19.     29. 

lu  a  B.   4:136.       C.   3G6.    Sor.  1 :  292.     CM14.     76. 

262.  Lost  Mis.  2:20.      C.  170. 

In  a  B.   4:  137.       C.   366.  177. 

—  Old  Pict.  2  :  39.      C.   176. 
C.  693.  99. 

—  Druses,    2  :  142.       C.    215. 
90. 

—  Stat.  &  B,  2 :  326.     C.  285. 
57- 

—  Soul's  Tr.  2 :  354.     C.  296. 
135. 

—  Luria,  2 :  403.    C.315.    159. 

—  R.   &    B.  3:29.       C.  426. 
49- 

—  R.    &  B.    3:45. 
134. 

—  R.   ct   B.  3:57. 


Prince  H.  4:361 

134. 

Fifine,4:419.    C.  722.    137. 

Fifine,4:420.    C.  723.    263. 

-Inn  A.  5:260.     C.  780.    38. 

Ivkn,6:131.     C.  881.     176. 

Shah  A.   6:243.      C.  930. 

15- 
True-hearted.    Para.  1 :  44.    C.  19. 
True-love-knot.    R.  &  B.  3:  158. 

C.  477. 
Truer.     R.  «fe  B.  3  :  332.     C.  545. 

78. 
Ger.  de  L.  6 :  345.     C.  971. 

"5. 
Chas.   A.   6  :  357.      C.   976. 

169. 
TruHer.    Ari.  A.  5:151.     C.  649. 
Truliest.      R.   &   B.   3:470.      C. 

598. 
Trumpet-blare.     Chas.  A.  6  :  355. 

C.  975. 
Trumpet-blast.     Red  Cott.  5  :  29. 

C.  747. 
Trumpet-blasts.     Ari.   A.  5  :  149. 

C.  648.     204. 
Trumpet-clang.    Cliris.  Sm.  6  :  314. 

C.  959.     230. 
Trumpet  -  summons.      Dan.   Bar. 

6  :  308.     C.  957. 
Trust.    A  Blot,  2:148.     C.  218. 

104. 
Soul's  Tr.  2 :  357.     C.  295. 

198. 
R.   &  B.  3:338.     C.  547. 

267. 
Ben  Ezra,  4:187.     C.  384. 

185. 
Ari.    A.    5:178.       C.    659. 

264. 
Inn    A.    5:285.       C.    790. 

129. 
Cenciaja,   5:372.      C.    822. 

244. 
Prol.  Fer.  6:240.     C.  929. 

133. 
Dan.  Bar.  6:307.     C.  957. 

5. 


270. 
R.   &  B.  3:81. 

37- 
R.   &  B.  3:98. 

93- 
R.   &  B.  3:128. 

118. 
R.   &  B.  3:187. 

124. 
R.   &  B.  3:193. 

65. 
R.  &  B.  3:264. 

134. 

R.   &  B.  3:278. 

..^73. 
R.   &  B.  3:337. 

178. 
R.   &    B.  3:361. 

24. 
R.   &  B.  3:367. 

R.   &  B.  3:371. 

135. 
R.   &  B.  3:399. 

S7. 
R.  it   B.  3:404. 

258. 
R.   &  B.  3:413. 

215.    252. 
R.  ife  B.  3:434. 

133. 
R.  &   B.  3:447. 

25. 
R.  &  B.  3:457. 

137- 


C.  432. 
C.  436. 
C.  446. 
C.  453. 
C.  465. 
C.  489. 
C.  491. 
C.  519. 
C.  525. 
C.  547. 
C.  555. 
C.  558. 
C.  559. 
C.  571. 
C.  572. 
C.  576. 
C.  585. 
C.  590. 
C.  594. 


499 


Truth 


INDEX 


Truth.    R.  &  B.  3:468.     C,  598. 

270. 
R.   &   B.  3:477.     C.  GOl. 

10. 
Eas.-Day,  4:53.     C.  334. 

70. 
Fra  Lippo,  4  :  80.     C.  345. 

179. 
Bishop  B.  4 :  100.     C.  352. 

155. 
In   a   B,  4  :  137.      C.  366. 

II. 

Worst,  4: 172.     0.379.    74. 

Death  in  D.  4  :  200.     C.  389. 

181. 
Sludge,    4  :  240.       C.  405. 

272. 
Balau.    4  :  295.        C.    615. 

200. 
Prince  H.  4:372.     C.  698. 

208. 
Prince  H.  4  :  378.     C.  700. 

135. 

Fifine,4:401.     C.  712.     10. 

Fifine,     4  :  409.       C.    716. 

209. 
Fifine,     4  :  427.       C.    727. 

283. 
Fifiiie,     4  :  428.       C.    727. 

218. 
Red  Cott.  5:32.     C.  748. 

74- 
Red  Cott.  5:35.     C.   749. 

74.     146. 
Red  Cott.  5 :  94.     C.   772. 

146. 
Ari.   A.   5  :  108.       C.    632. 

238.     271. 

Ari.  A.  5 :  156.    C.  651.    74. 

Inn  A.  5 :  287.     C.  790.     39. 

Lm    A.    5 :  297.      C.    795. 

152. 

La  S.  6 :  59.     C.  851.    275. 

Two  Poets,  6:85.     C.  862. 

288. 
Two  Poets,  6 :  99.     C.  866. 

37. 

Adam,  6:207.   C.916.    160. 

Joch.  6 :  225.     C.  924.    222. 

Joch.  6:  231.     C.  926.    22. 

Bean-St.    6:277.      C.  944. 

135. 
Epil.  Bean-St.  6:282.     C. 

946.    59. 
Ber.  de  M.  6:  295.     C.  952. 

180. 
Dan.  Bar.  6 :  309.     C.  958. 

147. 


Turn-again 

C.  958. 


Truth.    Dan.  Bar.  6:311 

135. 
Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  324.     C.  963. 

135. 

Fust,  6 :  378.     C.  984.     127. 

Fust,  6 :  382.     C.  986.     196. 

Truth  -  compelling.      Sol.    &    B. 

6 :  201.     C.  914. 
Truth-extracting.    R.  &  B.  3:  26. 

C.  424. 
Truth-teUing.     Ned  B.  6 :  151.     C. 

892. 
Truth-touched.    R.  &  B.  3:395. 

C.  569.     46. 
Truth's.     Bishop  B.  4 :  96.    C.  351. 

243. 
Truths.     Soul's   Tr.  2:354.      C. 

296.     185. 
Try.      In   a  B.  4:146.      C.  370. 

137- 

Rev.    6  :  435  ;     7  :  103.      C. 

1005.     34. 
Tsaddik.    Joch.  6 :  215.     C.  920. 
Tug.     Eas.-Day,   4:32.      C.   327. 

42. 
Tulou's.    Flute-M.  6:421;  7:76. 

C  1000 
Tumble.  'Gold  H.  4 :  169.    C.  378. 

213. 
Tumble -down.      Bean-F.   6:403; 

7  :  35.     C.  992.    210. 
Tumbliug- troop.     Fifine,   4:384. 
C.  702. 

Fifine,  4 :  422.     C.  724. 

Tune.    R.  &  B.  3:443.     C.  588. 
33. 

Chris.-Eve,   4:6.      C.  318. 

—Fifine,     4:389.       C.     705. 

Turban  -  flowers.      Pippa,   1 :  329. 

C.  129. 
Turf -smoke.      Don.    6:193.      C. 

911. 
Turk-like.    Chris.-Eve,  4 :  25.     C. 

325. 
Turmoil.     Chris.  Sm.  6:315.     C. 

960.     22. 
Turn.    Sor.  1 :  228.     C.  88.    37. 
Pippa,     1:366.       C.     144. 

173- 
Stat.  &  B.  2 :  326.     C.  285. 


54- 
R.   &  B.  3:134. 
214. 


C.  467. 


Turn-about.     Two  Poets,  6:108. 

C.  871. 
Turn -again.     Balau.  4:268.     C. 

604. 

500 


Turn-up 


INDEX 


Unbelief 


Tiim-up.     Colombe,  2:210. 

243. 

Turns.    R.  &  B.  3:210.     C.  502. 
„257. 
Turning-moment.      Luna,   2  :  382. 

C.  307. 
Turning-point.     R.   &   B.  3:150. 
C.  474.     64. 

Inn  A.  5  :  261.     C.  780, 

Turpitude.     R.  &  B.  3:296.     C. 

531.     128. 
Turret  -  stone.     Prince  H,  4 :  369. 

C.  6!t7. 
Tuscan.      La    S.   6:61.      C.   852. 

234- 
Tuscan-like.    R.&B.  3:446.     C. 

589. 
Tutelar.    Sor.  1 :  263.     C.  102. 
Twain-tables.     Iv^n,   6:140.      C. 

886. 
Twats.    Pippa,  1 :  366.     C.  145. 
Tweedle  -  trash.      Ari.   A.   5 :  124. 

C.  638.     169. 
Twelve  -  foot  -  square.      R.   &   B. 

3 :  408.     C.  574. 
Twelve-hours.    Pippa,  1 :  327,     C. 

129. 
Twenty-hours,     R,   &   B.   3:461, 

C.  595. 
Twenty-two.    R.  »fe  B.  3:  238.    C. 

509. 
Twenty-two-years-old,     Red  Cott. 

5 :  29.     C.  747. 
Twice.      Home-T.  A.  2:46.      C. 

179.     253. 
Twilight.     Straf.  1:184.     C,  71. 

254. 
R.   &   B.  3:454,     C.  593. 

45- 

Rudel,  4: 123.     C.  361,    7. 

Twilight -day,     R,  &  B.  3:469, 

C.  rm. 
Twilight  -  piece,      Andrea,    4 :  84, 

C.  34(5. 
TwUight-trysts.    R.  &  B.  3:332. 

C.  545. 
Twilights.     Sor,   1:201,      C.  78. 

Twin.     Rev.  6:435;   7:104,     C. 

1005.    234. 
Twin-pigeons,     Ivka,  6 :  134.      C. 

8S2, 
Twins,     Twins,  2:276,      C.  266, 

46. 
Twinks,    Cherries,  6:  265,    C,939, 

68, 
Two.     R.   &  B.  3:52,     C,  434, 

85. 


Two,    R.   &   B.  3 :  362,     C.  rm. 

170. 
Two-bars.     Master  H.   2:94.     C, 

19(i. 
Two-days',    R,  &  B,  3:42.3,     C. 

580. 
Two-edged.    R.&B.  3:474.     C. 

600.     256. 
Two -fold.     Ari,  A.  5:105.      C, 

6:50, 
Two-footed.     Agam.  6:38.      C. 

844. 
Two-sceptred.     Agam.  6:5.      C. 

832. 
Two-thonged.     Agam.  6:21.      C. 

838. 
Two -throned.     Agam.   6:5.      C. 

832. 
Two-weeks'.    R.  &  B.  3  :  10,     C. 

418,    88. 
Twy- necked.      Sor.    1:270.      C. 

105. 
Twy -prong.      Camel  -  D.   6:258, 

C'.  937. 
Tve-wig.    Ber.  de  M.  6:296,     C, 

952. 
Types.    Para,  1:82,     C,  33.     165. 
Tyranny,    Soul's  Tr.  2:356,     C. 

297,    225, 


TJ 

Agam,  6 :  7. 


C. 


Udder-loving, 

8;«. 

Uguccio,    Pippa,  1 :  360,     C.  142. 
Ulcer.     R.  &  B.  3 :  ISO,     C.  486, 

186. 
Umpire.     La  S.  6:  68.     C.  855, 
Un-dervished,    Eagle,  6:240,     C. 

929. 
Un-mouse-colors.  Prince  H.  4 :  375, 

C.  am. 

Un-Murrayed,      Red  Cott,   5:1, 

C.  737.     173. 
Un-Romed,    R,  &  B,  3:410.     C. 

575.     29. 
Unable.     Druses,  2 :  117.     C.  205. 

143- 
R.   &   B.   3:424.      C.  581. 

205. 
Unattainable.      Sun,    6:252.      C. 

9;i4.     8. 
Unaware.     Sor.  1 : 1%.     C.  76. 
UnbeUef.     R.   &   B.  3:420.     C. 

579.    73. 
Bishop  B.  4:97.     C.  351. 

16. 


.501 


Unbitten 


INDEX 


Unrest 


Unbitten.    Sor.  1:201.     C.  78. 
Uncandid.     R.  &   B.   3:328.     C. 

rA:i.    8i. 
Uncaught-up.      R.  &  B.  3  :  177. 

C.  485. 
Uncaused.    Sun,  6 :  250.     C.  934. 
Uncertain.    R.  &  B.  3:178.     C. 
485.     278. 

Two  Poets,  6 :  lOG.     C.  870. 

290. 
Uncertainty.     Eas.-Day,  4 :  33,    C. 

327.     73. 
Uncinct.      Prol.   A.   6:389;    7:1. 

C.  987.     91. 
Uncomplaisant.     R.  &  B.  3  :  184. 

C.  487. 
Uncongeal.     Dan.  Bar.  6:  303.     C. 

955. 
Uncoirupted.    R.  &  B.  3  :  373.    C. 

560.     223. 
Uncrumples.     Ger.   de   L.   6 :  346. 

C.  971.     16. 
Undefeated.     J.    Lee,  4 :  159.     C. 

375.     50. 
UndeUghtM.    R.  &B.3:348.   C. 

551.     217. 
Undisputed-for.     R.  &  B.  3  :  391. 

C.  568. 
Undistend.    R.    &   B.  3:66.      C. 

4KJ. 
Undoing.      Para.   1:121.      C.   48. 

142. 
Undone.    A  Blot,  2: 172.     C.  227. 
102. 

Last    R.    2:280.      C.   268. 

62. 
Undreamed-of.     Karsh.  4 :  67.     C. 

339. 
Uneasiness.     Red  Cott.  5 :  59.     C. 

758.     223. 
Unexerted.     Para.    1:53.      C.  22. 

203. 
Unexplainable.       Sludge,     4  :  250. 

C.  4(J9.     263. 
Unfairness.     Ari.   A.  5 :  136.      C. 

CAS.    47- 
Unfeathered.     Red  Cott.  5  :  6.     C. 

738. 
Unfit.    Soul's  Tr.  2  :  341.     C.  291. 

183. 
Unflinching.     R.  &B.  3:68.     C. 

441.     252. 
Unforeseen.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  347.    C. 

293.     244. 
Unforgettable.     Red  Cott.  5:20. 

C.  744.     69. 
Unfriendly.    Ari.   A.  5:120.      C. 

636.     10. 


Ungainly.     Fifine,  4  :  418.     C.  721. 

211. 
Unglossed.    Red  Cott.  5 :  53.     C. 

756. 
UngTound  -  away.      Fifine,   4  :  43(3. 

C.  731. 
Unhandsomely.    R.  &  B.  3:297. 

C.  532.     115. 
Unhappy.    R.   &  B.  3:216.     C. 
500.     155. 

R.   &  B.  3:383.     C.  564. 

285. 
Unheard-of.      Soul's  Tr.  2:349. 

C.  294. 
Unhoped-for.     In  a  B.  4  :  144.     C. 

369. 
Unhusk.      R.    &    B.   3  :  23.      C. 

423. 
Unimpaired.      Joeh.    6 :  219.       C. 

921.     44. 
Unknowable.     PiUar,  6:268.     C. 
941.     64. 

Bean -St.   6:280.      C.  945. 

268. 
Unlearned.     King  V.  1:378.     C. 

149.     258. 
Unlidded.      R.   &  B.  3:98.      C. 

453.     93. 
Unlimited.    R.  &  B.  3:386.     C. 

565.     218. 
Unlit.    Stat.  &B.  3:  328.     C.  286. 

223. 
Unlooked-for.     Straf.  1:157.     C. 

60. 
Unmakes.     R.    &   B.   3:403.     C. 

572.     239. 
Unmanageable.    R.   &  B.  3:323. 

C.  542.     75. 
Unmanly.     Epil.  A.  6 :  440  ;  7 :  113. 

C.  1007.     226. 
Unnoticed.    R.  &  B.  3:278,     C. 

525.     81. 
Unperplexed.      Joch.   6:224,      C. 

92:'..    58. 
Unplumped.     Fr.  Fu.  6:328.     C. 

964. 
Unprove.     Death  in  D.  4 :  202.     C. 

390. 
Unpunished.    R.  &B.  3:99.     C. 

453.     195- 
Unreached.     R.  «fe  B.  3  :  31.     C. 

426.     106. 
Unreasoned-out.  Bishop  B.  4: 110. 

C.  356.     118. 
Unreluctantlv.     R.    &  B.   3:445. 

C.  589.  '  109. 
Unrest.    Priuce  H.  4 :  376,    C,699. 

170, 


602 


Unseats 


INDEX 


Unseats.    Chas.  A.  6 :  361.    C.  977. 

i6g. 
Unself.    R.&B.  3:252,     C.  515. 

I20. 

UnsettUng.      Dev.   6 :  430 ;    7 :  92. 

C.  1003.     1 6. 
Unshamed.    R.  &  B.   3:99.     C. 

453.     195. 
Unshared.     Chris.-Eve,  4 :  27.     C. 

325.     153. 
Unsheaved.    Red  Cott.  5:1.     C. 

737. 
Unshent.    R.  &  B.  3 :  99.     C.  453. 

195. 
Unsickled.     Joch.  6:211.     C.  918. 

255. 
UnskiUed.      Fr.   Fu.   6:336.      C. 

968.     250. 
Unstridulosity.     Prince  H.  4:  361. 

C.  693. 
Unsubduably.    Inn  A.  5:314.     C. 

801. 
Unsuccess.    R.   &  B.  3:339.     C. 
547.     19. 

Ari.  A.  5 :  130.     C.  640. 

Unsullied.      Bean-St.   6:272.      C. 

942.     159. 
Unswan.     Worst,  4: 170.     C.  378. 
Untainted.     R.  &  B.  3:75.     C. 

444      282 
Untoward.  '  R.  &  B.   3:464.     C. 

596.     114. 
Untowardness.     R.  &  B.   3:119. 

C.  461.     190. 
Untrod.     Lost  L.  2:4.     C.   164. 

52. 
Hal.   &  Hob,  6:130.      C. 

880.     23. 
Untrue.    R.  «S:  B.  3:  264.     C.  519. 

134- 
UnvolatUize.    Ari.  A.  5 :  176.     C. 

659. 
Unwandered.       R.    &    B.    3:17. 

C.  421.     186. 
Unwise.      Joch.   6:214.      C.   919. 

85.     132.     149. 
Unwish.     Inn  A.  5:260.     C.  782. 

156. 
Unworldliness.       A   Blot,   2:  161. 

C.  223.     24. 
Uncle -Pope.       Colombe,    2:221. 

C.  247. 
Uncle's.    R.  &  B.  3:46.     C.  432. 

230. 
Under-current.     Sor.   1 :  201.      C 

78. 
Under-eye.    R.   &  B.  3:26.     C. 

425.    253. 


Use 

CUve,  6:162.      C. 


Under  -  rate 

H9(). 
Undergo.      R.  &   B.   3:367.      C. 

558.     215. 
Understand.      Balau.   4 :  275.      C. 

607.    48. 
Bean-St.  6:277.      C.  944. 

276. 
Understanding.      Family,   6:  248. 

C.  932.     9. 
Ber.  de  M.  6:  298.     C.  953. 

82. 
Unisonous.     Rev.   6 :  438  ;    7 :  110. 

C.  1U0().     192. 
Unit.     Camel-D.  6:259.     C.  937. 

Universal.    Pacch.5:328.    C.  806. 
Universe.     R.   &  B.  3:190.     C. 
490.     71. 

Epil.   Plot-C.  6:267.      C. 

940.     159. 

Inap.   6:400;     7:27.       C. 

991.     200. 
Up.     Fr.  Fu.6:332.     C.  966.    104. 
Up  -  borne.      Imp.   Aug.   6:428; 

7  :  88.     C.  1002.     37. 
Up  -  gathered.      Sor.   1 :  265.      C. 

103. 
Up-grubbing.      Joch.   6:227.      C. 

924. 
Up-hiU.     Chris.-Eve,  4 :  5.    C.318. 
Up  -  pattered.     Chris.  -  Eve,  4  :  2. 

C.  316. 
Up-spouted.    Colombe,  2 :  223.    C. 

248. 
Up-sprung,    Sor.  1 :  295.     C.  115. 
Up -startled.     Fifine,  4:425.     C. 

725. 
Up-thrust.    Sor.  1 :  195.     C.  75. 
Up -waking.     Fil.  Bald.  5:382. 

C.  825. 
Ups.     R.&B.  3:116.     C.  460. 
UpiBthral.     Agam.  6  :  13.     C.  835. 
Upraises.      Saul,   2 :  56.      C.  183. 

241. 
Upside  -  down.      Red  Cott.   5  :  14. 

C.  742. 
Upthrust.    Sor.  1 :  287.     C.  112. 
Upturned.     Old  Pict.   2:39.     (7. 

176.     20. 
Urochs.     Flight,  2  :  292.     C.  272. 
Us.     R.  &   B.  3  :  170.      C.  482. 

21. 
Use.     Para.  1  :  120.     C.  47.     181. 

King  C.   1  :  395.      C.   156. 

237. 
Gram.  Fun.  2 :  211.     C.  279. 

59. 


503 


Use 

Use. 


INDEX 


Vary 


Luria,  2:401.    C.  314.   133- 
K.   &  B.  3:321.      C.  540. 

21. 

R.  &  B.   3  :  383.      C.  5G4. 

22g. 
Red  Cott.  5:26.     C.  746. 

211. 

Ari.  A.  5  :  227.       C.  675. 

270. 

Ber.  de  M.  6  :  298.     C.  953. 

66. 

Chris.  Sm.  6 :  317.     C.  961. 

127. 
Use-trampler.    Apol.  &  F.  6  :  287. 

C.  949. 
Used.     R.  &  B.  3:205.     C.  496. 

228. 
Used-up.      Red   Cott.   5:22.      C. 

744.     182. 
Useless.       Para.    1  :  72.       C.    29. 

160. 
Usufructuary.       R.    &    B.   3:71. 

C.  442. 
Usurpature.    Master  H.  2 :  95.     C. 

197.     94. 
UtensU.    R.  &  B.  3:86.     C.  448. 

Utility.     Soul's  Tr.  2  :  343.      C. 

291.     260. 
Red  Cott.  5:30.     C.  747. 

52. 
Uttermost.    Stat.  &  B.  2 :  328.    C. 

286.     38- 
In  a  B.  4  :  150.      C.  371. 

52. 
Uzzean.    Joch.  6:217.     C.  920. 


Vacation.     Red  Cott.  5:96.      C. 

773.    215. 
Vacuity.     Chris.-Eve,  4:21.      C. 

323.    42. 
Vain.     Pan.  1:9.     C.  5.     204. 

Pau.  1 :  13.     C.  7.     189. 

Para.  1 :  74.     C.  30.     207. 

Waring,    2:271.       C.    265. 

267. 

Porph.     2:329.        C.     286. 

144. 

R.   &  B.  3:440.     C.  587. 

132. 
Sludge,    4:235.      C.    403. 

159- 

Joch.  6 :  211.     C.  918.     186. 

Camel-D.   6:259,      C.   937. 

280. 


Vainly.  Red  Cott.  5 :  33.     C.  749. 

II. 

Valence  of    Cleves.       Colombe, 

2  :  187.  C.  233. 

Valens.  Death  in  D.  4  :  192.     C. 

386. 

VaUd.  Bar.  de  M.  0:298.      C. 

953. 

Valley.  Pippa,   1:347.      C.   137. 

143- 
Valley-fatness.    Prince  H.  4  :  369. 

C.  696. 
Valley-level.    Colombe,  2 :  220.  C. 

247.     59. 
Valley-thief.     Pippa,   1 :  356.      C. 

140. 
VaUombrosa  Convent.    R.  &  B. 

3:424.     C.  580. 
Value.      Luria,  2:403.      C.    315. 
164. 

Likeness,   4:221.      C.   397. 

58. 
Fifine,     4:439.       C.     733. 

134. 
Two  Poets,  6 :  111.     C.  872, 
264. 

Valvassor.    Sor.  1 :  210.     C.  81. 
Vane.    Straf .  1 :  129.     C.  50. 

Straf.  1 :  145.     C.  56. 

Straf.  1 :  157.     C.  60. 

Vanish.       Para.     1 :  ()9.       C.    28. 
244. 

Flower's,     2:9.       C.     166. 

79. 
Vanity.      Sor.    1:293.      C.    114. 
38. 

Sol.   &  B.  6:202.     C.  914. 

192. 
Vantage-coign.    Prince  H.  4 :  369. 

C.  696. 
Vantage  -  ground.     Luria,  2 :  394. 

C.  312. 
Vapor.    R.  &  B.  3:29.     C.  426. 

Kai'sh.     4 :  64,        C.     338. 

232. 
Fra  Lippo,  4 :  78.     C.  344. 

232. 


Vapor-flag.    Sor.  1 :  318.     C.  124. 

272.  ^ 

Vapor  -  swathing.      Ber.   ae  M. 

6 :  300.     C.  954. 
Vapoi-wreath.     Dubiety,  6 :  391 ; 

7:6.     C.  988. 
Various.     Master  H.  2:96.      C. 

197.    ti9. 
Vary.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  348.     C.  294. 

3. 
504 


Vase 


INDEX 

C.  752, 

C.  (328, 

C, 


Victory 


Vase.    Red  Cott.  5:41. 

233. 
Vastitude.    Ari.  A.  5  :  99, 

217. 
Vaucluse.    App.  Fail.  4 :  257 

412. 
Vault.    R.  &  B.  3:11.     C.  418. 

109. 
Vault-roof.      Apol.   &  F.   G:293. 

C.  951.     254. 
Vaunts.     Geo.  B.  D.  6:324.     C. 

9fi;!.    254. 

Vehicle.     Ari.  A.  5 :  176.     C.  659. 

236. 
VeU.      Rev.   6:435;    7:103.      C. 

1(X)5.     264. 
Veils.     Chris.-Eve,  4  :  15.     C.  321. 

264. 
Veiled.    Pau.  1 :  24.     C.  11.     252. 
Vein-cordage.     Balau.  4 :  314.     C. 

622. 
Vein  -  streaks.     Sor.  1:214.      C. 

83. 
Velleity.      Red   Cott.   5:84.      C. 

768. 
Velvet.    R.  &  B.  3:408.     C.  574. 

272. 
Velvet-capped.     Sor.   1:212.     C. 

82. 
Velvet-compliment.     Two  Poets, 

6 :  98.     C.  867. 
Velvet  -  sheathed.       Imp.     Aug. 

6  :  427 ;  7  :  87.     C.  1002. 
Venerino.     R.  &   B.  3:227.      C. 

505. 
Venice.     Touch,  C  910. 

Goldoni,  C.  910.     95. 

Venturini.     R.  &  B.  3:22,     C. 
423. 

R.  &  B,  3 :  475.     C.  fiOO. 

Venus -like.     Fust,    6:368.      C. 


R.  &  B.  3:279. 
100. 


980. 
Verb-tree. 

525. 
Verdi.     Bishop    B.    4 

352. 
Verdict.    R.  &B.3:182.     C.487. 
93. 

Bishop  B.  4 :  100.     C.  352. 

280. 
Verdicts.     R.   &  B.   3:182.     C. 

487.    93. 
Verminous.    Sun,  6 :  249.     C.  933. 
Verona.    Sor.  1 :  193.     C.  75. 
Verse.    Dis  Al.  4:174.     C.  379. 
266. 

Two  Poets,  6: 102.    C.  869. 

55. 


Verse-and-prose.    R.  &  B.  3  :  232. 

C.  507. 
Verse -book.      Fifine,  4:400.      C. 

711.     162. 
Verse-making.     Para.   1 :  98.      C. 
89. 

Epil.  Cher.  6 :  265.    C.  939. 

Verses.  Sor.  1 :  227.  C.  88.  36. 
Versicles.  Eagle,  6  :  240.  C.  929. 
Vertebrte.    R.  &  B.  3:410.      C. 

575. 
Vertiginously.     R.   &   B.   3:455. 

C.  593. 
Verjuice.     R.  &  B.  3  :  43.     C.  431. 
Vessel.      Chris.  -  Eve,   4  :  30.      C. 

326.     81. 
Vestiment.     Chris.-Eve,  4:3.     C. 

317. 
Vesture-chest.     R.   &   B.   3:164. 

C.  480.     277. 
Veuillot.      Red   Cott.  5:81,      C. 

767. 
Vex.    Ger.  de  L.  6:345.     C.  971. 

258. 
Vexes.    King  V.  1 :  381.     C.  150. 

194. 
Via  Lungara.    R.  &  B.  3 :  60,     C. 

438. 
Via  Vittoria.    R.  &  B.  3:  76.     C, 

444, 
Vice,      Pippa,    1:339.      C.    133. 
18. 

Ari.    A.    5:108.      C.    632. 

271. 
Fr.    Fu.    6:332.      C.    966. 


c. 
c. 
c. 
c. 


Vice-devising.     Agam.  6 :  9. 

833. 
Victim.    Ber.  de  M.  6:296. 

952.     119. 
Victim-queen.    Ari.  A.  5 :  238, 

680. 
Victim's.      R.   &  B.  3:19. 

422.    41. 
Victor's  Duke.    King  V,  1 :  371. 

C.  14(3. 
Victor.    R.  «fe  B.  3:187.     C.  489. 

124. 
Victor-city.    R.  &  B.  3  :  194,     C, 

491. 
Victory.    R.  &  B .  3 :  443,     C.  558, 
79. 

Death  in  D.  4 :  204.     C.  390. 

50. 

Red  Cott.  5:27.     C.  746. 

13- 

Pillar,     6 :  268.      C.     940. 

127. 


505 


Vie"w-commanding 


IXDEX 


Volatile 


View-cornmauding.    Inn  A.  5 :  243. 

c.  77:5. 

Viewed.      Bean  -  St.    6:272.      C. 

942.     128. 
Vifril-torment.     R.   &   B.   3:144. 

C.  471. 
Yisnl  -  torture.     R.    &  B.  3:23. 

C.  423. 
Vigor.    Saul,  2:  49.     C.  180.    I55- 
Villa-door.     R.  &  B.  3:14.     C. 

420. 
Villa-gate.    R.  &  B.  3:217.     C. 

500. 
Villf^e  -  clump.      Inn  A,   5:244. 

C.  774. 
Village-joy.     Ari.   A.   5:144.     C. 

64<). 
Village-man.    Ari.  A.  5:121.     C, 

G37. 
Village-sports.     La  S.  6 :  58.     C. 

851. 
Villanies.     Straf.  1:130.     C.   50. 

120. 
Villanous.    Pippa,  1:362.     C.143. 

176. 
Vindictive.      Sludge,   4:235.      C. 

403.     159. 
Vine.    Joch.  6:218.     C.921.     89. 
Vine  -  bouglis.    Englislim.  2 :  259. 

C.  261. 
Vine -frontier.      Sor.    1:295.      C. 

115. 
Vine-leaf.    Sor.  1:321.     C.  125. 
Vine-palm.    Sor.  1 :  274.     C.  106. 
Vine-twig.     Shah  A.   6:241.     C. 

931. 
Vinegar.      R.  &  B.  3:143.      C. 

471.     279. 
Vineyard-rank.      Ari.  A.   5 :  145. 

C  64(5. 
Vintage-gifts.     Ari.  A.  5: 140.    C. 

644. 
Vintage  -  mode.     Ari.  A.  5 :  123. 

C.  (537. 
Violante.     R.   &    B.    3:18.      C. 

421. 
Violante-nature.    R.   &  B.  3 :  45. 

C.  432. 
Violence.    Joeh.   6:222.     C.   923. 

244. 
Violet-crown.     Balau.  4 :  318.     C. 

624. 
Violet-dark.    Sor.  1:206.     C.  80. 
Violet-patch.    Ari.  A.  5:144.     C. 

646. 
Violet  -  smatch.       Epil.     Pacch. 

5  :  389.     C.  828. 
Violets.    Para.  1:64.     C.  26 


Violin-varieties.    Red   Cott.  5  :  7. 

C.  739. 
Viper -broth.      Sor.     1:263.      C. 

102. 
Viper-like.     R.  &   B.   3:65.     C. 

440. 
Virgil.    Pan,  6:188.     C.  909. 
Virgin-age.     Agam.  6  :  9.     C  833. 
Virgin-band.     R.&B.3:210.     C. 

498.     19. 
Virgin-miaded.    Chris.-Eve,  4 :  19. 

C.  322. 
Virgin-sacrifice.     Ari.   A.   5 :  118. 

C.  635. 
Virgin  -  slaughter.      Agam.  6  :  9. 

C.  833. 
Virtue.    Respecta.  2 :  79.     C.  191. 

Soul'l'  Tr.  2 :  339.     C.  290. 

248. 

Luria,  2  :  .365.     C.  300.     6. 

R.  &  B.  3:137.      C.  469. 

188 

R.   &'  B.  3:2.54.     C.  515. 


271. 
R.   &   B.  3:373. 


C.  560. 
223. 
Ari.    A.  5:227.      C.    675. 

270. 
Dan.  Bar.  6  :  310.     C.  958. 
282. 
Virtuous -like.     R.  &  B.  3:111. 

C.  458.     26. 
Visible.     Ber.  de  M.  6:301.     C. 


954.     157. 
Vision.      Chris.  Sra.   6 :  315. 


c. 
c. 


960.     128. 
Vision-like.    Red  Cott.  5 :  96 

773. 
Viterbo.     Bea.  Sig.  6  :  412  ;  7  :  57. 

C.  996. 
Vociferance.      Master    H.    2:94. 

C.  196. 
Voice.     Pippa,    1:350.      C.  138. 

94- 

Pippa,  1:357.     C.  141.     76. 

R.   &  B.  3:27.      C.  425. 

216. 
R.   &  B.  3:84.      C.  447. 

199- 
Voice-distortion.     Ari.  A.  5  :  118. 

C.  636. 
Voices.      Para.    1 :  118.       C.    47. 

153- 
Pippa,     1  :  364.       C.    144. 

283. 
VolatUe.    Geo.  B.  D.  6:319.    C. 
961. 


506 


Volpato'a 

Volpato's.     Likeness,  4:221. 

397. 
Voltaire.     La  S.  6:74.     C. 

132- 

Two  Poets,  6 :  107.     C. 

Volte-face.    R.  &  B.  3:474. 

600. 
Voluptuousness.      Pippa,    1 : 
C.  139.     52. 

Forgiv.    5  :  364.       C. 

III. 
Vote-pebbles.     Agam.  6 :  25. 

839. 
Votive-visor.     Ari.  A.  5 :  132. 

641. 
Vow.    R.  &  B.  3:195.     C. 

61.    274. 
Vows.    King  V.  1:384.     C. 

23- 
R.   &  B.   3:24.      C. 

195- 
Vowel-buds.     Ari.  A.  5  :  114. 

634.     170. 
Voyage.      Para.    1 :  96.      C. 

213. 
Vulgar.      R.   &  B.   3  :  155. 
476.     185. 

Pietro,     6  :  177.       C. 

211. 


■w 

Wafture.     R.    &    B.  3:289. 

529. 
Wj^e.     R.  &  B.  3:28.     C. 

240. 
Wage  -  time.     Fifine,  4 :  426. 

726.    4. 
Wages.      Prince    H.    4 :  365. 

695.     214. 
Wager-by-battle-of -cheating. 

&B.  3:120.     C.  462.     190. 
Waggery.     R.&B.3:51.    C. 

108. 
Wagon-shaft.      R.  &  B.   3: 

C.  562._ 
Wagon-side.    Red  Cott.  5 :  3. 

737. 
Wairoa.    Guard.  Ang.  2  :  89. 

195. 
Wait.    Sor.  1 :  314.     C.  123. 

R.&B.3:8.     C.417. 

R.  &B.3:23.    C.423. 

R.   &    B.  3:281.     C. 

29. 

Paceh.  5  :  .328.     C.  806. 

Bifur.  5 :  347.     C.  812. 


INDEX 

C, 

858, 


"War-tower 


871. 
C. 

354. 

819. 

c. 

c. 

492. 
151. 
424. 

C. 
38. 

C. 
904. 


c. 

425. 

c. 
c. 

R. 

434. 

377. 

C. 

c. 

271. 
124. 
204. 
526. 


45- 


Waiting.      R.   &  B.   3:326.      C. 

.542.     185. 
Waiting  -  girls.     Sor.  1 :  316.      C. 

123. 
Wake.      Evelvn,  2:25.      C.   171. 
266. 

R.   &  B.  3:250.     C.  514. 

III. 

Rev.   6  :  439  ;    7  :  111.      C. 

1006.     138. 
Waking.      Bishop  B.   4:97.      C. 
351.     73. 

Dev.   6  :  430  ;     7  :  92.       C. 

1003.     24. 
Wall -side.      Bad  D.  IL  6:395; 

7  :  17.     C.  989. 
Wall -sundered.     Ari.  A.  5:206. 

C.  669. 
Walls.     King  V.  1 :  374.     C.  147. 

194. 

R.   &  B.   3  :  65.      C.   440. 

280. 
Wan.    Chriis.-Eve,  4 :  19.     C.  323. 

69. 
Wander.      R.    &   B.   3 :  408.      C. 

574.     83. 
Wane.    R.  &  B.  3  :  426.     C.  581. 

175- 
Waning  -  point.      Para.  1 :  36.     C 

16. 
Want.    R.   &  B.  3:71.     C.  442. 
204.  I 
R.  &  B.  3:450.      C.  591. 

97- 

La  «.  6 :  62.     C.  853.    25. 

Wants.      R.    &    B.  3:155.       C. 

476.     185. 
Wanting.    Soul's  Tr.  2:357.     C. 
297.     96. 

R.  &  B.  3  :  74.    C.  443.    26. 

War.       Glove,    2 :  247.       C.    256. 
183. 

Ari.    A.    5:131.      C.   641. 

183. 

Fr.    Fn.    6:338.      C.    969. 

61. 

Rev.    6:435;    7:104.       C. 

1005.     183. 
War -engine.      Dan.  Bar.  6:311. 

C.  958. 
War  -  madness.      Ari.  A.  5 :  231. 

C.  677. 
War  -  spear's.     Agam.  6 :  17.     C 

836. 
War-steed's.    Stat.   &  B.  2:322. 

0.  284. 
War-tower.    Dan.  Bar.  6  :  311.    C 
958. 


507 


War-'wearied 


INDEX 


War-wearied.     Forgiv.  5 :  365.    C. 

Kli».     184. 
Warlike.     Forgiv.  5  :  3G5.     C.  819. 

89. 
Wardrobe  -  drawers.      R.    &   B. 

■A  :  a.     C.  415. 
Warehouse-apron.    Inn  A.  5 :  248. 

C.  775. 
Warm.     RedCott.  5:6.     C.  738. 

202. 
Warmth.     R.  &B.3:59.     C.  437. 
205. 

Ixion,6:210.     C.917.    154- 

Warning^rop.    Agara.  G :  47.     C. 

847. 
Warrants.      Red   Cott.   5:9.      C. 

740.     118. 
Warranted.      Ari.  A.  5 :  233.     C. 

678.     175.  _ 

Warrior  -  part.      Sor.  1:289.      C. 

113. 
Warrior-priest.    R.   &   B.  3:380. 

C.  563. 
Warrior-woman.    Colomhe,  2 :  223. 

C.  248. 
Wash-over.      Shidge,  4:254.      C. 

411. 
Washer-wife.    R.  &  B.  3:  45.     C. 

432. 
Washhand  -  basin.      Two    Poets, 

6:102.     C.  869. 
Wasp.    R.  &  B.  3 :  428.     C.  582. 

Wasp-Uke.    R.  &  B.  3:417.     C. 

578. 
Waste.    Para.  1:39.    C.  17.    273. 
R.  &  B.  3:402.      C.  572. 


"Way 
C. 


23. 
Wasted.       Para.  1 :  47. 

135. 
Colombe,   2:193. 

89. 
Eas.-Day,  4:51. 

95- 
Wastefid.    Karsh.  4:67. 


180. 
Watch.      Para.     1 :  53. 

258. 
Ben  Ezra,  4:188 

284. 
Red  Cott.  5:31. 

291. 
Watch-dog.      La   S.    6 :  57.      C. 


C.  20. 

a  236. 
C.  333. 
C.  339. 
C.  22. 
a  384. 
C.  748. 


850. 
Watch-lights.    Andrea,  4 :  87.     C. 

347. 
Watch -place.     Agam.  6:12.    C. 

834. 


Watch -tent.     Luria,  2:377. 

305. 
Watch-tower.    Cleon,   4:120,     C. 

3()0. 
Watched.     Para.    1:41.      C.   18. 

86. 
Water.     Gondola,  2 :  266.     C.  263. 

wtter-bow.     Cleon,  4:120.     C. 

360. 
Water  -  breeze.     Colombe,  2 :  192. 

C  235 
Water -buds.      Colombe,   2 :  182. 

C.  231. 
Water-butt.    Mesmer.  2 :  243.     C. 

J55. 
Water-gold.    Old  Pict.  2 :  37.     C. 

176. 
Water-gruel.     Inn  A.  5 :  302.     C. 

797. 
Water-Haides.    Agam.  6:21.     C. 

000 

Water -head.      Chris. -Eve,   4:8. 

C.  319. 
Water-like.     Chas.  A.  6 :  361.     C. 

977. 
Water-lily.     Gondola,   2:265.     C. 

263. 
Water- purlings.     Forgiv.  5:365. 

C.  819. 
Water-sprinkle.    Flute-M.  6 :  424  ; 

7 :  80.     C.  1000. 
Water -white.      Dubiety,  6:391; 

7:6.     C.  987. 
Waters.    Rudel,  4:123.     C.  361. 

W^tts.      Chris.   Sm.  6:314.      C. 

959 
Wave.       Sor.    1:279.       C.    108. 

254. 
Wave-environment.  Fifine,  4 :  411. 

a  717. 

Wave-like.     Agam.  6 :  36.     C.  843. 
Wave -surge.     Agam.   6:21.      C. 

838 
Wave -washed.     R.  &  B.  3:24. 

0.424.     277. 
Wave-worked.      Pan,   6 :  189.     C. 

909. 
Wavelike.    R.   &  B.   3:357.     C. 

554.     287. 
Wax-white.    R.  &  B.  3  :  223.     C. 

503.     220. 
Waxwork-show.     Chas.  A.  6:  356. 

C.  975. 
Way.    Para.  1:40.     C.  17.     182. 

Para.  1 :  43.     C.  18.     126. 

1 Para.  1:99.     C.  39.    94. 


508 


Way  INDEX 


Way.    R.   &    B.  3 :  13.     C.  419. 

94. 
R.  &  B.  3:270.      C.  521. 

278. 
R.  &   B.  3:274.      C.  523. 

27. 
Fifine,     4 :  431.        C.     729. 

2ig. 
Way-weary.     Ari.   A.  5:183.     C. 

G(jl. 
Ways.      Forgiv.   5:363.      C.   818. 

220. 
Wayfaring-one.    Agam.  6 :  27.    C. 

840. 
Wa3rwardness.     Para.   1 :  27.      C. 

12.     204. 
Weak.     Para.  1 :  67.     C.  27.    274. 

Para.  1 :  73.     C.  30.     56. 

Para.  1 :  121.     C.  48.     173. 

Flight,     2 :  303.        C.    276. 

176. 
Porph.     2 :  329.       C.     28(5. 

195. 
Sours  Tr.  2:339.     C.  290. 

89. 
R.   &  B.  3:93.       C.  451. 

81. 
R.   &  B.  3:470.      C.  598. 

232. 
R.  &  B.  3:471.      C.  599. 

242. 
Balau.    4:289.       C.    612. 

149. 
Crist.  &  M.  6 :  203.     C.  915. 

243. 
EpU.  Mihrab,  6:256.      C. 

SKIG.     227. 

Bean -St.  6:278.     C.  944. 

^  78. 

Weak-eyed.     Andrea,  4:86.     C 

347. 
Dev.    6:429;    7:90.        C. 

1003.     132. 
Weak-footed.    Ber.  de  M.  6:  298. 

C.  953.    243. 
Weakness.    Straf.  1 :  188.     C.  72. 

61. 

Said,  2 :  57.     C.  184.     95. 

R.  &  B.  3:330.      C.  544. 

15- 
R.  &  B.  3:342.      C.  549. 

28. 
Bishop  B.  4:111.     C.  357. 

114. 
Caliban,   4 :  210.       C.  393. 

78. 
Ber.  de  M.  6:  296.     C.  952. 

244. 


Wedding-night 
C.  473. 


Weal.    R.  &  B.  3:148 

199. 
Weal-prankt.     Apol.  &  F.  6 :  285, 

C.  948. 
Wealth.     In  a  Y.  2:83.     C.  192. 

143- 
R.  &  B.  3:154.      C.  475, 

14. 
Red  Cott.   5:19.      C.   74.3, 

204. 
Pietro,     6 :  176.       C.     903. 

192. 
Doctor,     6 :  185.       C.    908, 

III. 

Joeh.  6 :  227.     C.  925.    4. 

Weapon.     Pippa,   1:337.     C.  132, 

160. 
SoiU's  Tr.  2:357.     C.  297. 

84.     255. 
Wearily.      Colombe,    2 :  230.      C. 

250.     188. 
Weariness.     Sor.  1:279.     C.  108. 

254- 
Epil.  Fer.  6:283.     C.  946, 

43- 
Weary.      Para.     1 :  68.      C.    28. 

61. 

Straf.  1 :  153.     C.  59.     175. 

Chris. -Eve,   4:7.     C.   318. 

164. 
Inn    A.    5 :  299.       C.    795. 

273- 
Weasel-lap.    Ari.  A.  5:143.     C. 

(U6. 
Weather  -  battered.     Chris.  -  Eve, 

4 :  22.     C.  323. 
Weather-beaten.    Sor.  1 :  249.     C, 

9(5. 
Weather-bound.    Sor.  1 :  253.     C. 

98.     212. 
Weather  -  glass.      Sludge,  4 :  243. 

C.  406. 
Weather-side.    J.  Lee,  4 :  155.     C. 

373. 
Weather-tight.     R.  &  B.  3:196, 

C.  492. 
Weave.    Master  H.  2 :  95.     C.  196, 

242. 
Forgiv.    5:367.        C.    820, 

114. 


Web-growth.     Two  Poets,  6 :  109. 

C.  872. 
Wedding-band.     R.  &   B.  3:205. 

C.  4i)6. 
Wedding-gown.    R.  &  B.  3:144. 

C.  471. 
Wedding-night.     Red  Cott.  5:6. 

C,  738. 
509 


Wedding-robe  INDEX 

Sor,  1:201.     C, 


Wedding  -  robe. 

78. 
Wedge.    Lovers' Q.  2:  28.    C.172. 

279. 
Gold   H.   4:1G6.      C.  377. 

70. 
Wedge -like.     Chris. -Eve,  4:29. 


Ari.  A.  5:237.     C. 


C.  326, 
Wedgiiigly. 

680. 

Weed.    R.  &  B.  3:407.     C.  574. 
107. 

J.    Lee,    4:156.      C.    374. 

181. 
Weed-flowers.    DisA1.4:175.    C. 

380. 
Weed  -  growths.      Inap.    6:400; 

7:26.     C.  991. 
Weeds.    J.   Lee,  4:156,     C.  374. 
154. 

Touch,  C.  910. 

Week.    R.  &  B.  3:303.     C.  534. 

273- 
Week-long,    Red  Cott.  5 :  40.     C. 

751. 
Weep.    Pau.  1 :  14.     C.  7.    49- 

Para.  1 :  50.     C.  21,     291 . 

R.   &  B.  3:311,      C,  537. 

254. 
Welcome.     R.  &  B,  3:359,     C. 

555.     24. 
Well-advisedly.     Colombe,  2 :  194. 

C.  236. 
Well -apart.      Ivkn,    6:137.      C. 

884. 
Well-appointed.     Bishop  B.  4:  94. 

C.  350. 
Well-being,     Agam.  6:41,      C. 

845. 
Well-bred.     R.  &  B.   3:22.     C. 

423. 
Well  -  caring.     Agam.  6 :  44.      C. 

846. 
WeU- climbed.     Red  Cott.  5 :  93. 

a  771. 

Well-conducted.     Red  Cott.  5:  51. 

C.  755.     230. 
Well  -  counselled.      Cleon,   4:115, 

C.  358. 
WeU-deserving.     Red  Cott,  5 :  6. 

C.  738. 
Well-disposed.    Balau,4:264,    C. 

602. 
Well-doing.    R.«feB.  3:112.     C. 

458. 
WeU-eamed.    King  C.  1:402.     C. 

158,    214. 


"Well-trained 

C, 
C. 


Well-endowed.    Agam.  6 :  14. 

835. 
Well-famed.    R.  &B,  3:46. 

432.     271. 
Well-fleeced.     Agam,  6:44.      C. 

846. 
Well  -  garnished.      Pacch.   5 :  326. 

C.  805. 
Well-greaved.    Fifine,  4:393.     C. 

707. 
WeU-heads.    Chris.-Eve,  4 :  20.  C. 

323. 
Well-heaped.     Agam.  6 :  10.     C. 

834. 
Well-hidden.     Agam.  6:20.      C. 

838. 
Well-intentioned.    R.  »fe  B.  3 :  404. 

C.  572.     258. 
Well-known.     Para.  1 :  40.     C.  70. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  179.     C.  485. 

Well-masked.     Ari.  A.  5 :  17(5.     C. 


Pacch.  5:  320.    C. 
R.   &  B.  3:299. 


658. 
Well-matched 

803.     211. 
Well-meaning 

C.  533. 
WeU-nigh.     Para.   1:64.      C.  26. 

258. 
Well-omened.    Agam.   6 :  24.      C 

839. 
Well-packed.     Agam.   6 :  15.      C 

8.36. 
Well-reasoned.      Bean-St.  6 :  276. 

C.  944. 
Well-remembered.    Melon.  6 :  241. 

C.  930. 
Well -reputed.     R.    &  B.  3:127. 

C.  465. 
WeU-saffroned.    Two  Cam.  6 :  260. 

C.  937. 
WeU-shaped.     Agam.  6:14. 

835. 
Well -side.     Ari.   A.   5:144. 

64(;. 

Well  -  spring.     Agam.   6 :  27. 

840. 
WeU-suasive.     Agam.   6:29. 

841. 
Well -sung.      Fifine,   4:389. 

705. 
Well-timed .    Shah  A.  6 :  245, 

9.31.     108. 
Well-tb-do.    R.  &  B.  3:196 

492. 
Well-told.     Don.  6:194.     0.911. 
Well-trained,     Joch,  6:212,      C. 

918. 


510 


Well-trough 


■Well-trongh.    Ari.  A.  5:159 

652. 
Well -tuned.     Agam.  6:3G. 

843. 
WeU-tumed.    R.  &  B.  3:231.  C. 

506. 
Well-willing.     Fr.  Fu.  6 :  340.     C. 

969. 
WeU-wishing.    Agam.   6 :  24.      C. 

839. 
Well-won.    Para.  1 :  102.      C.  41. 

28. 
WeU-worn.      Geo.   B.   D.  6:326. 

C.  964.     134. 
Welter.    R.  &  B.  3:  469.     C.  598. 

27. 
Wentworth.    Straf.  1:131.    C.  50. 

63. 
Were-wolves.    R.  &B.  3:14.     C. 

420. 
West.     Para.  1:106.     C.  42.     238. 

R.   &    B.   3:29.      C.  425. 

204. 
Westering.    Para.  1 :  97.     C.  39. 
Whale.     Pan.  1 :  19.     C.  9. 
What  -  d'you  -  call  -  'em.      Sludge, 

4 :  244.     C.  407. 
What  's-his-name.    R.  &  B.  3:  67. 
C.  441. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  409.     C.  574. 

Whatsoever-was-the-name.    R.  & 

B.  3:408.     C.  574. 
Whealed.     R.    &  B.  3:146.      C. 

472. 
Wheel.    Sor.  1:257.     C.  100.     52. 
Ben  Ezra,  4:190.     C.  385. 

43-     191. 
Sludge,    4:251.       C.    410. 

265. 
Wheel -work.      Sor.    1:294.      C. 

114. 

Flight,  2 :  293.     C.  273. 

Wheelwork.    Death  in  D.  4 :  201. 

C.  389. 

Whiffles.    R.  «S;B.3:26.     C.  425. 

131. 
Whimperingest.     Ivkn,  6:136.    C. 

S,S3. 
Whined.    R.  &  B.  3:  29.     C.  426. 

254- 
Whip-cord.    R.  &  B.  3:347.     C. 

550. 
Wliirlwind-lash.  Two  Poets,  6 :  79. 

C.  mi   250. 

Whisker-plucking.   R.  &  B.  3 :  430. 

C.  583.     250. 
Whisper.    Two  Poets,  6:83.     C. 

861.    33. 


INDEX 

C. 
C. 


VVhLstling-while 

C.  4 
White 


Wickedness 

R.   &  B.  3:8. 
C.  459, 


C.  417.    285. 

.    R.  &  B.  3:113 

235- 
R.   &  B.  3:382.     C.  564, 

276, 
R.   &   B.  3:. 396.     C.  569. 

268. 
Bean -St.  6:273.      C.  943, 

19. 
Bean -St.   6:274.      C.  943. 

266. 
White -bearded.      Artemis,  4:63. 

c.  3;w. 

White-beer.     Flight,  2:291.     C. 

272. 
White-blossomed.    A  Blot,  2 :  170. 

C.  277. 
White-cross,     Druses,   2 :  100,     C. 

198. 
White-haired.     Para.  1:109.      C. 

43. 
White-night's.    Fifine,4:396,     C, 

709. 
Wliite-of-egg.    FU.   Bald.  5:379, 

C.  825.    39. 
White -steeded.      Ari.   A.   5:180. 

C.  6()0. 
White-walled.      R.   &   B.  3:220. 

C.  502. 
White -wedge.      Caliban,    4:208, 

C.  392. 
White's.      Bean -St.  6:276.      C. 

94.S.     19. 
Whittling-knife.     Inn  A.  5:258, 

C.  779. 
Who.     Inn    A.    5:284,      C.    790. 

219. 
Whore's-tricks.     R.  &  B.  3  :  103, 

C.  479. 
Why.     K.   &   B.  3:125.     C.  4(>i. 

167. 
Wick.    R.   &  B.  3:17.     C.  421. 
139- 

R.   <fe   B.  3:108.      C.  457, 

201. 
Wicked.     Ari.  A.  5:109.     C.  632. 
154. 

Inn    A.     5:313.       C.    801. 

83. 
Wicked-looking.    R.  &  B.  3 :  55, 

C.  4»i. 
Wickedness.     One  Word,  4 :  125. 
C.  362.    45- 

Ari.    A.    5:100.      C,   628, 

279. 

Fr.    Fu.    6:333.      C.   967. 

275. 


511 


"Wicket-gate 


Wicket-gate.    Ned  3.6:148.     C. 

890. 
Wide-awake.    Ger.  de  L.  6 :  346. 

C.  971. 
Wide-eyed.     Sludge,  4:235.      C 

403. 
Wide-known.     Joeh.  6 :  216.      C. 

920. 
Wide-wasting.    Oh  Love  I  6 :  386. 

C.  874. 
WideUer.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  355.     C. 

297. 
Widely-instanced.    K.  «fe  B.  3 :  46. 

C.  432.     271. 
Wife.     By  Fire,  2:62.     C.   186. 

132. 
R.   &    B.  3:52.      C.  434. 

R.  &*B.   3:123.     C.  463. 

250. 
R.   &  B.  3:139.     C.  469. 

30. 
R.   &  B.  3:169.     C.  481. 

211. 
R.  &  B.  3:222.      C.  503. 

164. 
R.  &  B.  3:229.     C.   505. 

103. 
R.   &   B.  3:302,     C.  534. 

148. 
R.  &  B.  3:473,      C.  600. 

"3. 
Likeness,   4:220.      C.   396. 

191. 
Red  Cott.  5:22.     C.  744. 

88 
Ari.'A.    5:121.      C.    637. 


INDEX  Wind 

Woman's,  2  :  22.     C.  171. 


125. 
Doctor,     6 :  181. 

49 
Joeh.  6 :  220 


C.    906. 


C.  922.     183. 
Wife-paramour.     R.    &   B.  3:6(j. 

C.  440. 
Wives.     Pippa,  1:331.      C.   130. 

180. 
R.  &  B.  3:240.     C.  510. 

"3- 
R.  &  B.  3:295.     C.  531. 

224. 
Inn    A.    5:266.      C.    782. 

156. 
Mar.  Rel.  6:120.     C.  876. 

118. 
Wifehood.    R.   &  B.  3:138.     C. 

469.     118. 
Wig-ties.    Two  Poets,  6 :  108.     C. 


Wild. 

283. 
Wild-beast.    Hal.  &  Hob,  6 :  128. 

C.  879. 
Wild-beast-battle.    Ari.  A.  5 :  184. 

C.  661. 
Wild-bird-wings.      Lady,   6 :  406  ; 

7 :  44.     C.  994. 
WUd-brier.    R.  &  B.  3:244.    C. 

T)\\. 
Wild-flower-wine.  Red  Cott.  5 :  84. 

C.  768. 
Wild -mustard.     Red  Cott.  5:2, 

C.  737. 
Wild-pomegranate-flower.    Balau. 

4 :  268.     C.  (i04. 
Wild-wood.     Prince  H.  4:  350,    C. 

689. 
Wildcat's.     R.   &  B.  3:97.     C. 

452.     72, 
Wile,    Two  Poets,  6:  98,     C.  867. 

51- 
Wiles.    R.&B,  3:325.     C.  542. 

144. 
Will.    Sor.  1 :  292.     C.  114.     142. 

Andrea,     4:86.       C.     347. 

27. 

Abt    V.    4:184.      C.    383, 

93- 

Forgiv.  5 :  .364.     C.  819. 

Forgiv.    5:365.      C.     819. 

20. 

Camel-D.   6:259.      C.  937. 

280. 
Will's.    R.  &  B.  3:103.     C.  455. 

102. 
WiUed.    Abt  V.  4:184.     C.  383. 

96. 
William.    Straf.  1 :  184.     C.  71. 
WiUow-leaf.     Fifine,   4:418.      C. 

722. 
Willow  -  wicker  -  flask.     Ari.  A. 

5:116.     C.  635. 
Willow-work.    Ari.  A.  5: 152.     C. 

649. 
Win.     King  V.   1:388.      C.   153. 
261. 

One   Way,  2:76.      C.   190. 

20. 

Druses,    2:117.       C.     205. 

143- 
W^n  -  penny,      Don.    6 :  199.       C. 


871. 
Wild.    Pau.  1 : 1. 


C.  2.    252, 


913. 
Wince.    R.&B.  3:267.     C.  520. 

Winced.    R.  &  B.  3:  74.     C.  443. 

III. 
Wind.    Sor.  1:212.     C.  82.    236. 

512 


Wind 


INDEX 

C.  521. 


Wind.    R.  &  B.  3:269. 
232. 

J.    Lee,    4:100.       C.    375. 

63. 

Joch.  6 :  224.     C.  924.     176. 

Wind-abating.     Agam.   6 :  9.      C. 

833. 
Wind-blasts.     Ari.  A.  5 :  182.     C. 

661. 
Wind  -  egg.     Inn  A.   5 :  253.      C. 

777. 
Wind-grieved.    De  Gus.  2 :  45,    C. 

178. 
Wind-lyres.     Eas.-Day,  4 :  53.     C. 

334. 
Wind -shaken.     Para.   1:84.      C. 

34. 
Wind-sown.     Inap.  6 :  400  ;  7 :  26. 

C.  991. 
Wind  -  thrills.      Saul,    2:58.      C. 

184. 
Winds.       Para.     1 :  118.       C.    47. 

153. 
Ari.    A.    5:104.      C.    630. 

212 

Windebank.'    Straf.    1:160.      C. 

61. 
Winding-up.      Para.   1:100.      C. 

40. 
Windle-straws.     R.   &   B.  3:407. 

Window!     R.  &  B.  3  :  29.     C.  425. 
204. 

5R.    &  B.   3:223.      C   503. 

26. 

R.   &  B.  3:432.      C.  584. 

169. 
Window-pane.     Pippa,  1 :  328.     C. 

129. 
Window -seat.     R.   &  B.  3:107. 

C.  456. 
Window-terrace.    R.  &  B.  3 :  88. 

C.  449. 
Windowed.    Red  Cott.   5:2.     C. 

737. 
Wine  -  cup.       Para.     1 :  100.       C. 

40. 
Wine-drenched.     Ari.   A.   5 :  227. 

C.  675. 
Wine-house-gossip-face.     R.  &  B. 

3 :  456.     C.  593. 
Wine -lees.     Ari.   A.   5:108.      C. 

632.     237. 
Wine-lees -poet.     Ari.  A.   5:121. 

C.  637. 
Wine-press.    R.  &  B.  3:  102.    C. 

454.     207. 
Joch.  6 :  231.     C.  926.     138. 


"Wisdom 
.Sor.    1:241.      C. 


Wine  -  scented 

9;',. 
Wine-song.    Saul,  2:48,     C.  180. 
Winepress.     R.  &  B.  3:102.     C. 

454.     207. 
Wing-beats.     Agam.   6:26.      C. 

840. 
Wing  -  borne.     Agam.  6 :  .'J4.      C. 

843. 
Wing-case.    Red  Cott.  5:94.     C. 

772. 
Wings.     Chris.-Eve,4:26.    C.325, 
181. 

J.    Lee,    4:157.      C.    374. 

145- 

J.    Lee,    4 :  160.       C.    375. 

29. 

Balau.     4:268.        C.    604, 

25^. 

Prol.    Fif.   4:383.     C.  702, 

141. 
Wink.     R.  &  B.  3:192.     C.  490. 

232. 
Wiiming.      Colombe,   2:211.      C. 

243.     114. 
Winter.     Pau.  1:2.     C.  3. 

R.   &  B.  3:3«i2.     C.  55<i. 

46. 

Red   Cott.   5 :  54.      C.   756. 

4- 
Two  Poets,  6:  77.     C.  859. 

Winter-chamber.    Red  Cott.  5 :  45. 

C.  753. 
Winter-gloom.     Red   Cott.   5 :  97. 

C.  773. 
Wintei^nights.      Para.   1 :  (!2.      C. 

26. 
Winter  -  time.      Colorabe,    2 :  185. 
C.  232.     247. 

R.   &  B.  3:349.     C.  551. 

^.  =^58. . 

Winter  -  warning.     Flight,  2 :  294. 

C.  273. 
Wire-shirt.     R.   &  B.  3:347,     C. 

550, 
Wire-tliread.     Red  Cott.  5 :  68.    C. 

762. 
Wisdom.      Pai-a.    1 :  35.      C.    15. 
61. 

R.   ct   B.  3:212.      C.  49i), 

58. 

R.   it   B.   3:330.      C.   544. 

15. 

Chris.-Eve,  4  :  8.     C.  319. 

La  S.  () :  6:3.     C.  853.     202. 

Mihrab,    6:254.       C.     935. 

178. 


513 


Wisdom-tooth 


INDEX 


■Woman-creature 


Wisdom-tooth.     Fifine,  4:425.    C. 

725. 
Wise.    Para.  1:66.     0.27.     loi. 

. King   C.    1:393.      C.  155. 

8o. 

R.    &   B.   3:38.      C.  429. 

34. 

R.   &   B.  3:365.     C.  557. 

285. 

R.   &  B.  3:424.     C.  581. 

246. 
Wise -like.     Ari.   A.   5:162.      C. 
653.     131.  „ 

Wise-manned.     R.  «fe  B.  3 :  11.     O. 

41S. 
Wise-working.     Fr.  Fu.  6 :  340.   C. 

969. 
Wiselier.    Geo.  B.  D.  6:  325.     C. 

946.     2. 
Wiseman.      R.   &   B.   3:11.      C. 

41.S. 
Wiser.     App.    Fail.    4:258.      C. 

413.     96. 
Wish.     A   Blot,  2:148.     C.  218. 
188. 

R.    &    B.  3:278.      C.  525. 

266. 

Epil.  Melon-S.  6:242.     C. 

930.     268. 
Wish  -  shop.     Pietro,   6 :  178.      C. 

904. 
Wistfully.    R.   &   B.  3:108.     C. 

457.     127. 
Wit  -  bewildered.      Agam.    6 :  19. 

C.  837. 
Wit -fireworks.      Ari.   A.   5:129. 

C.  640. 
Wit-flame.     Ari.   A.   5:136.      C. 

642. 
Wits.     Pan.  1 :  14.     C.  7.    49- 
Witanageraot.      Old    Pict.    2:44. 

C.  178. 
Within-doors.     Soul's  Tr.  2 :  3o3. 

C.  296. 
Without-doors.    Agam.  6 :  49.    C. 

848. 
Witness-bearer.    Agam.  6:  46.    C. 

847. 
Wittol.    Pippa,  1:333.     C.  131. 
Wive.    R.  &  B.  3:290.     C.  529. 

118. 
Wizard-craft.     Geo.  B.  D.  6:  323. 

C.  963. 
Wizardry.     Karsh.  4 :  69.     C.  340. 
Woe.    Childe  R.  2 :  332.     C.  'li^l. 

99- 

Childe  R.  2  :  336.     C.  289. 

164. 


Woe.    R.   &   B.   3:476.      C,   601, 

159- 
Woe-purfled.    Apol.  &  F.  6 :  285, 

C.  948. 
Woe-remembering.      Agam.   6 :  8. 

C.  833. 
Woe -whelmed.      Ari.   A.  5:222. 

0.674. 
Woe  -  worn.      Pietro,   6 :  174.      C. 

902, 
Woe-wreaking.    Agam.  6  :  35.    C. 

843. 
Woes.    Soul's  Tr.  4  :  .342.     C.  291. 

225. 
Woke.    R.  &  B.  3:56.     C.  436. 

261. 
R.   &   B.   3:344.     C.  549. 


57. 
Wolds.      Straf.    1:185.       C.    71. 

Woif-'face.     R.  &  B.  3:90.      C. 

449. 
Wolf-nature.     R.  &  B,  3 :  454.     C. 

591.     153. 
Wolf -work.    R.   &  B.  3:15.     C. 

420. 
Wolf's-skin.     R.&B.  3:422.     C. 

580. 
Wolves.     R.  &  B.  3  :  15.     C.  420. 

288. 
Woman.      Colombe,    2:188.       C. 
234.     194. 

Soul's  Tr.  2 :  353.     C.  2%. 

9. 

R.   &  B.  3:156.     C.  476. 

234. 

R.   &  B.  3:216.     C.  500. 

220. 
R.    &    B.  3:249.      C.  513. 

195- 
R.    &   B.   3:434.      C.  585, 

245. 
One  Word,  4 :  128.     C.  363. 

234. 
In    a  B.    4:136.      C.  366. 

In^^f'B.   4:151.      C.   372. 

Crist.'&  M.  6 :  203.     C.  915, 

243. 

Bea.  Sig.  6 :  415  ;  7 :  62.     C. 

997. 
Woman  -  avenging.     Agam.    6 :  9. 

C.  833. 
Woman -chUd.     R.  &  B.  3:379. 

C.  562. 
Woman-creature.      Fifine,   4:417. 

C.  72L 


514 


Woman-dealer 


INDEX 


Word 


Woman-<lealer.     R.  &  B.  3:116. 

C.  460. 
Woman-fiend.    Inn  A.  .5:277.     C. 

JH7. 
Woman-figttre.     Pan,  G:  1!S9.      C 

<»09. 
Woman-glory.     Bea.   Sig.   G :  419  ; 

7:71.     C.  999. 
Woman-like.     Balau.  4:314.      C. 
622. 

Two  Poets,  6 :  109.     C.  871. 

286. 
Woman-mother.     R.  &  B.  3:223. 

C.  51)3.     267. 
Woman-side.     R.  &  B.  3:  407.    C. 

574. 
Woman-spy.     R.  &B.  3:92.     C. 

450. 
Woman-world.     R.    &   B.  3:426. 

C.  581.     215. 
Woman-worship.     Inn  A.   5:301. 

C.  796.     105. 
Woman's.    R.   &  B.  3:239.     C. 
509.     142. 

Ari.    A.    5:131.      C.    641. 

250. 
Dan.  Bar.  6:  309.     C.  958. 


17- 


306. 


Woman's  -  want.      Inn  A 

C.  798.     155. 
Woman's-woik.     R.  &  B.  3  :  129 

C.  4(i6.     120. 
Women.    Respeeta.  2 :  79.    C.  191 
164. 

R.   &  B.  3:207. 

274. 

R.  &   B.  3:275. 

22. 

Andrea,     4 :  85. 

161. 
In    a    B.   4:139. 

.  ^45.  ^ 
In    a    B.   4:143. 

98. 
Aii.    A.    5:148. 

65 


C.  497. 

C.  524. 

C.  347. 

C.  367. 

C.  368. 

C.  647. 

218.  C. 


Women-faces.      Sor.   1 

84. 
Women-folk.    RedCott.5:4.     C. 

737. 
Women-servants.    Sor.  1 :  207.    C 

80. 
Women  -  wallers.      Balau.   4 :  ."28. 

C.  G28. 
Women-worthies.      Fifine,  4 :  389. 

C.  705. 
Women-wreaths.    RedCott.5: 41. 

C.  752. 


Womankind.       Red   Cott.   5  :  '-','1. 

C.  74.S.     237. 
Womankind -pursuit.     Red  Cott. 

5 :  :!3.     C.  748.     30. 
Womanliness.     Inn  A.  5  :  "M\.     C. 

79.S.     167. 
Won.     A    Ulot,   2 :  167.      C.   226. 
16. 

Inn    A.    5 :  2(m.       C    782. 

282. 

Rosny,   6  :  .391  ;    7  :  4.      C. 

9.S7.     208. 
Wonder-white.     Fifine,  4  :  417.    C. 

721. 
Wonder-work.     Fifine,  4:440.     C. 

T.'A. 
Wonder-working.     Fr.  Fu.  6 :  338. 

C.  '.K)8.     279. 
Wood.      Pippa,   1 :  337.      C.   132. 
160. 

Fifine,    4  :  385.        C.     703. 

133- 
Wood-boys".     Aii.  A.  5  :  \'A.     C. 

6.5(). 
Wood-coal.     Fra  Lippo,  4 :  75.    C. 

342. 
Wood-piler's.     Para.   1 :  108.      C. 

43. 
Wood-ways.    Mesmer.  2 :  245.    C. 

25(!. 
Wood  -  worm.       Mesmer.    2  :  243. 

C.  255. 
Woods.      Sor.     1 :  216.      C.     8:!. 

229. 
Woodland  -  sights.      Sor.    1:211. 

C.  82. 
Woodland-time.     By  Fire.   2  :  (i5. 

C.  187. 
Wool.      Up  —  Down,   2  :  32.      C. 
174. 

R.   A-   B.  3:2SG.      C.  .528. 

223. 
Wool-flock.    R.  &  B.  3  :  102.     C. 

454. 
Wool-plant's.     Joch.   6:211.      C. 

918.     loi. 
Wool -tufts.      Pan,     6 :  UK).       C. 

!)09. 
Wool-wliite.     Death  in  D.  4 :  194. 

C  386. 
Word.    Str.af .  1 :  i:«.     C.  .52.     50. 

Porph.2:.{;!0.     0.286.    92. 

R.    &   B.   3:194.     C.   491. 

190. 
R.    iV-    B.   3:195.     C.   492. 


172. 

Epil.  Melon-i>.  6:242. 
9:'.0.    268. 


C. 


515 


Word-abounding 


INDEX 


World 


Word  -  abounding.    Agam.  6:34. 

C.  8415. 
Word  -  artillery.     Ari.   A.  5:141. 

C.  (145. 
Word-bubbles.     Fifine,4:442.    C. 

735. 
Word-interchange.    Ai"i.  A.  5: 12!). 

C.  640. 
Word-mesh.     Chas.  A.  6:  359.     C. 

1)76. 
Word-monger.    Ari.  A.  5:156.    C. 

6.J1. 
Word-swathe.     Paceh.  5 :  331.     0. 

S()7. 
Word-use.      Chas.  A.  6:357.     C. 

<)76.     234. 
Words.     Pau.  1 :  24.     C.  11.     252. 

Para.  1 :  67.     C.  27. 

Sor.  1 :  202.     C.  78.     194. 

Gondola,   2:264.       C.  262. 

SouFs  Tr.  2:  345.     C.  292. 

117. 

Liiria,2:402.    C.  .315.    160. 

E.   &  B.  3:117.     C.  460. 

161. 
R.   &  B.  3:192.      C.   41K). 

232. 

R.  &  B.  3 :  269.     C.  521. 

R.    &   B.   3:276.      C.  524. 

68. 
R.   &  B.  3:343.      C.  549. 

R.^^i'B.    3:402.      C.   572. 

R.^^ic    B.   3:477.     C.  601. 

112. 

Worst,     4 :  170.        C.    378. 

272. 
Worst,     4:173,       C.    379. 

Ari!^A.    5:108.       C.    632. 

237. 
Inn    A.    5:290.       C.    792. 

223. 
Two  Poets,  6 :  109.     C.  871. 

286. 

Joch.  6 :  225.     C.  924.     252. 

Shah   A.   6:245.      C.   931. 

108. 
Wordless.     Ari.    A.    5:120.      C. 

cm.     137- 
Work.     Para.  1 :  .53.     C.  22.     258. 

Sor.  1 :  286.     C.  111.     222. 

King    V.    1:380.     C.    152. 

203. 
Old  Pict.   2:38.      C.    176. 

289. 


Work.    Luria,  2:370.    0.302.   31. 
R.  &  B.  3:143.      C.   471. 

R.   &' B.  3:277.      C.  524, 

150. 
Eas.  -  Day,  4 :  51.      C.   333. 

95- 
In   a    B.    4:136.      C.   3(Ri. 

145- 
Ben  Ezra,  4:  189.     C.  385, 

220. 

Fifine,4:413.    C.  71«.    281. 

Ari.  A.  5:  159.    C.  652.     55. 

Forgiv.    5:359.        C.    817. 

loi.     230. 
Forgiv.    5 :  3(i7.        C.    820. 

Epil.   Bean-St.   6:282.     C. 

94(J.     33- 
Work  -  time.       EpU.    A.   6:  440  ; 

7 :  114.     C.  1007.     267. 
Works.    Old  Pict.  2:40.     C.  177. 
10. 

Andrea,     4:84.        C.    346. 

106. 
Worked.     Luria,  2:370.     C.  302. 
31. 

In  a  B.  4:135,      C.  365. 

273. 
Worker.     R.  &    B.  3:333.      C. 
545.     156. 

R.   &   B.  3:386.     C.  565, 

284. 
Working.    Soul's  Tr.  2 :  355.     C. 

29(5.     251. 
World.     Para.  1:84.    C.  34.     260. 

Old    Pict.   2:38.      C.    176. 

289. 

Respecta.    2:79.      C.    191. 

143. 

Master  H.   2:92.     C.   195. 

59. 

A  Blot,  2: 167.    C.  226.    16. 

Waring,  2  :  274.    C.  266.    1 1 . 

Fhght;    2:309.        C.    279. 

248. 

Luria,  2 :  364.     C  300.     25. 

Luria,     2:370.        C.     302. 

Luria,  2:  381.     C.  307.     20. 

Luria,     2:384.       C.     308. 

R.'^i'  B.   3  :  17.     C.  421. 

186. 
R.    &    B.    3:22.      C.   42.3, 

r"&    B.    3:66.      C.    440, 

210, 


516 


World 


INDEX 

C.  448. 


Worn 


World.     R.  &B.  3:8() 

30. 
R.    &   B.    3:256.     C.  T>m. 

232. 
R.  &   B.   3::?71.     C.    559. 

135. 
R.  &  B.   3:387.     C.   5(5(5. 

136. 
R.  &  B.  3:389.      C.   5G6. 

35- 

R.  &    B.  3:434.      C.   585. 

133. 
Eas.  -  Day,  4 :  53.      C.  334. 

145. 

How  it  S.  4 :  58.     C.  336. 

St.    Prax.    4:89.      C.    348. 

57. 
Bishop  B.  4:94.      C.  350. 

175. 
Bishop  B.  4  :  109.     C.  356. 

2. 
In  a   B.  4:13(5.       C.    366. 

61. 
In   a    B.    4:151.      C.    372. 

290. 
J.    Lee,    4:156.       C.    374. 

154. 
Prince  H.  4:342.     C.  (586. 

137- 

Fifine,  4 :  405.    C.  714.    233. 

Fifine,  4:431.    C.  729.    219. 

Ari.    A.    5:160.       C.    (552. 

197.     284. 
Nnmph.    5:348.       C.    813. 

78. 
Forgiv.    5 :  358.        C.    817. 

201. 

La  S.  6 :  65.     C.  854.     248. 

Two  Poets,  6:77.     C.  859. 

70. 
Two  Poets,  6:  82,     C.  8C1, 

180. 

Pietro,  6:177.    C.  904.     87. 

Wanting,    6:193.      C.  911. 

85. 
Fr.    Fu.    6:339.      C.    969. 

212. 
World-advance.    Prince  H.  4 :  341. 

C.  (586. 
World-smart.     At  the  M.  5 :  336. 

C.  808. 
World-wanderer.  Pau.  1:11.  C.  (5. 
World-weary.     Inn  A.  5 :  284.     C. 

789.     250. 
Reph.    6:431;    7:95.       C. 

1004.     56. 
World-wide.    Colombe,  2 :  226.    C. 

249.     198. 


World-wide.    La  S.  6 :  67.    C.  855. 

169. 
Family,    6:247.       C    932. 

132. 
World-widened.     Eas. -Day,  4:51. 

C.  333. 
World's.     R.  &  B.  3:  13.     C.  419. 


17- 

R.   &   B.    3:19.     C. 

422. 

99- 
R.  &   B.    3:3%.     C. 
268. 

5(59. 

Two  Poets,  (5 :  90.     C. 

864. 

177. 
Rev.    6 :  435  ;    7  :  103. 

C. 

1005.     203. 

World's  Fair.     Two  Poets,  6 :  105. 

C.  870. 
World's-business.    King  V.  1 :  370. 

C.  14(5. 
World's  -  bystanders.       R.    &    B. 

3 :  15.     C.  420. 
World's-want.      Fust,  6:380.     C. 

985. 
World's-wonder.     R.  &  B.  3  :  83. 

C.  447. 
WorldUug's.     R.  &  B.  3 :  366.     C. 

557. 
Worm.      Druses,  2 :  133.     C.  212. 

107. 
Soul's  Tr.  2 :  35(i.      C.  297. 

9- 
R.   &   B.    3:27.      C.    425. 

26. 
R.  &    B.    3:37.      C.    429. 

90. 
R.   &  B.  3:371.     C.  559. 

277. 
Chris.  -  Eve,  4:7.     C.  318. 

150. 
Red    Cott.    5:2.      C.    737. 

213. 
Worm-eaten.     Para.  1 :  IM).     C.  3(5. 
Worm-like.     R.  &  B.  3:  S3.     C. 

447.     243. 
R.    &    B.    3  :  398,     C.  570. 

157- 
Worms.    J.  Lee,  4  :  154.     C  373. 
221 

Ari.    A.    5:130.       C.   (540. 

162. 
Wormed.      Para.    1 :  (54.      C.    26. 

258. 
Wormwood.       R.    ct    B.    3  :  476. 

C.  (501. 
Wormwood  Star.     R.  &  B.  3 :  458, 

C.  594. 
Worn.     Pau.  1:7.     C.  4, 


517 


Worn 


INDEX 


■Written 


Worn.    R.  &B.    3:254.      Colo.    Worth.    J.  Lee,  4:161.       C.    375 


285. 
Worn  -  out.     Sor.   1  :  213.      C.  82. 

149. 

Sor.  1 :  2GC.     C.  103.     162. 

Flight,  2  :  298,    C.  275.    69. 

Eetl   Cott.   5:22.      C.   744. 

182. 
Worry.    R.  &  B.  3:34.     C.  428. 

6. 
R.   &  B.  3:198.      C.  493. 

95- 
Worse.     Para.  1 :  79.     C.  32.     229. 

Andrea,  4  :  85.  C.  34(i.    223. 

Worsened.    R.  &   B.  3:118.     C. 

4(!1. 
Worst.      Pippa,  1:365.      C.  144. 

51. 
Soul's  Tr,  2:339.     C.  290. 

102. 

Luria,  2:  398.     C.  313.     9. 

R.&B.3:15.     C.420.    51. 

R.&B.3:34.     C.428.    52. 

—  R.   &  B.   3:308.      C.  558. 

17- 
Chris.-Eve,  4:24.     C.  324. 

37- 
Caliban,    4:212.       C.    394. 

178. 

La  S.  6 :  71.     C.  857.     82. 

Dan.  Bar.  6:309.     C.  958. 

17- 
Worship.     Sor.  1:204.    C.  79.    17. 
R.    &   B.   3:2n.     C.   498. 

181. 

Chris.-Eve,  4 :  27.     C.  325. 

Worth.     Para.  1:65.    C.27.     215. 

Para.  1:121.     C.  48.     142. 

By    Fire.    2:65.      C.    187. 

196. 
Colombe,   2:188.      C.   234. 

274. 
Colombe,   2:218.      C.   246. 

15. 
Stat.  &  B.  2 :  325.     C.  285. 

285. 
R.   <&   B.   3:153.      C.  475. 

156.     196. 
R.  &   B.   3:215.      C.  500. 

180. 
R.   &  B.   3:419.      C.  578. 

203. 
R.    &   B.  3:433.      C.  584. 

28. 
R.    &    B.   3:455.     C.  593. 

89. 
Eas.  -  Day,  4 :  50.      C.  333. 

10. 


145- 

Fifine,4:405.    C.714.    233. 

Red   Cott.   5:32.      C.   748. 

237- 

La  S.  6 :  70.     C.  856.     164. 

Pillar,  6 :  268.     C.  940.     58. 

Worth-its-weight-in-silver.  Agam . 

6:28.     C.  841. 
Worthy.     Para.  1:95.    C  38.  241. 

Chris.-Eve,  4:20.     C.  323. 

153. 
Would.    Said,  2: 57.     C.184.    55. 
Would-be.    Geo.B.D.6:321.     C. 

962. 
Wound.     Pan.  1:1.     C.  2.     190. 
Wound  -  inflictors.       Soul's    Tr. 

2:339.     C.  290. 
Wound-up.    R.  &  B.  3:384.     C. 

5()4.     213. 
Wrap.     Para.  1:100.    CAQ.     135. 
Wrap  -  round.     Agam.  6 :  43.     C. 

S45. 
Wrappage.      Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  319. 

C.  961.     192. 
Wrath.     Cliilde  R.  2 :  333.     C.  288. 
Wrath-molten.     Ger.  de  L.  6 :  350. 

C.  973. 
Wrath-wave.    Ari.  A.  5 :  237.     C. 

679. 
Wreath -work.     Red  Cott.   5:2. 

C  737     21^ 
Wreck.  '  Red  Cott.  5 :  83.     C.  768. 

I  go. 
Wreck -strewn.     Fr.   Fu.  6:338. 

C.  968.    286. 
Wren.     Light  W.  2:  277.     C.  267. 

59. 
Wren -like.      Two  Poets,   6:106. 

C.  870. 
Wrenched.    R.  &  B.   3 :  443.     C. 

588.     103. 
Wring.    Ari.  A.  5:101.     C.   629. 

Wriilkle.    Forgiv.  5 :  362.     C.  818. 

167. 
Writ.    Two  Poets,  6:109.     C.  871. 

193. 
Write.    R.  &  B.  3:266.     C.  520. 
260, 

R.   &  B.  3:379.      C  562. 

126. 
K:arsh.  4:70.    0.340.     259. 


Writhled.    Sor.  1 :  300_.     C.  117. 
Writing -scrap.     Cenciaja,  5:371. 

C.  822. 
Written.     R.   &  B.  3:356.      C. 

554.     58. 


518 


"Wrong 


INDEX 


YelloTved 


Wrong.    Old  Pict.  2:38,     C.  176. 

285. 

Before,  2 :  87.     C.  194.     28. 

Colombe,  2 :  197.     C.  237. 

Soul's  Tr.  2:339.     C.  290. 

182. 
Souls  Tr.  3:22.      C.   423. 

83. 
R.   &  B.  3:57.       C.   437. 

R.  &'B.  3:273.      C.  523. 

286. 
R.  &  B.  3:365.      C.  557. 

102. 
R.  ct   B.  3:431.      C.   583. 

244. 
BLshop  B.  4:114.     C.  358. 

259. 
Worst,     4:171.        C.    378. 

162. 
Death  in  D.  4 :  196.     C.  387. 

224. 
Ari.    A.    5:112.      C.    633. 

4- 

Bifur.5:346.    C812.    106. 

Geo.  B.  D.  6:  319.     C.  961. 

159. 
Geo.  B.  D.  6:  320.     C.  962. 

158. 
Ger.  cle  L.  6 :  348.     C.  972. 

166. 
Wrong-doing.     R.  &  B.  3:  22.     C. 

423.     83. 
Wrong-headed.     Family,   6:248. 

C.  932.     112. 
Wrongs.     Luiia,  2:395,     C.  312. 

227. 
R.   &  B.   3:44.      C.   431. 

259. 
R.  &  B.   3:408.      C,   574. 

191. 
Wronged.      King  C.   1:395.      C. 

laf).     223. 
Ponte  A.  (i :  407  ;  7 :  46.     C. 

994.     131. 
Wiirtzburg.    Para.  1 :  29.     C.  13. 


Xanthns.    Sor.  1 :  261.     C.  101. 

Death  in  D.  4  :  192.     C.  386. 

Xerxes.      Prince  H.  4 :  354.      C. 


691. 


Yawn. 


Prince  H.  4:358.     C.692. 


Yawning-fit.     DisAl.  4:176.     C. 

;wo. 

Year.     In  a  B.   4:  135.     C.  3C5, 
61. 

La  S.  6 :  '£>.     C.  850.     159. 

Geo.  B.  D.  6:  324.     C.  963. 

254- 
Year-by  -  year.      R.   &   B.  3:151. 

C.  474.    79. 
Year's.    R.  &  B.  3:103.     C.  455. 

34. 
\  ear's-work.     In  a  B.  4 : 1.32.     C. 

364. 
Years.     Stat.   &    B.  2:326.      C. 
285.     276. 

ChUde  R.  2:3.36.     C.  289. 

164. 

R.   &    B.    3:15.      C.  420. 

135. 
R.    cV:    B.    3:74.      C.  443. 

205. 

R.   &  B.  3:278.     C.  525. 

273. 
Balau.     4:297.      C.     615. 

2ig. 
Prince  H.  4:379.     C.  700. 

265. 

Fust,  6:  377.     C.  983.     46. 

Yearly.    R.  «fe  B.  3:  279.     0.525. 

77- 
Yearn.     Two  in  C.  2 :  73.     C.  189. 

181. 
Death  in  D.  4 :  204.     C.  391. 

263. 
Yearns.      Straf.    1:181.       C.    69. 

172. 
In   a    B.  4:145.      C.  3(i9. 

145. 
Balau.     4:310.       C.     621. 

47- 
Yearning.       Pau.     1:20.       C.    9. 
92. 

Para.  1 :  36.     C.  16.     216. 

Crist.  2 :  18.     C.  169.     129. 

Soul's  Tr.  2  :  350.     C.  2i«. 

125. 

Geo.    B.     D.    6 :  322.       C. 

9()3. 
Yearnings.       Fifine,     4:408.       C. 

716.     169. 
Yellow-bearded.    Sor.  1 :  296.     C. 

115. 
Yellow-berried.  Two  Poets,  6 :  109. 

C.  872. 
Yellow-vested.    Para.  1:109.     C. 

43. 
Yellowed.    Two  Poets,  6:96.     C. 
S(M.     287, 


519 


Yester-trwilight 


Yester-tw-ilight.     King  V.  1 :  386. 

C.  ir.2. 
Yesterday.    Sor.    1:287.     C.  111. 

255- 
Yet-umiamed.     R.  &  B.  3 :  9.     C. 

41S. 
Yoke.      Sor.     1 :  291.       C.     113. 

54- 
Yoke-couple.      Agam.   6:21.      C. 

s:w. 
Yoke-fellows.     Ari.  A.  5  :  224.    C. 

675. 
Yoke  -  pair.      Agam.     6:5.       C. 

8.32. 
Yoke  -  strap.     Agam.  6 :  17.      C. 

8:36. 
Yoke  -  trace.     Agam.    6:9.       C. 

833. 
Yoked.      La    S.    6:61.      C.   852. 

21. 

Yonder-you.      Fifine,   4 :  391.      C 

706. 
You.     King  V.    1:387.      C.   152. 

288. 
E.   &   B.   3:170.     C.  482. 

39- 
Yoimg.     K.  &  B.  3:51.     C.  4;M. 

"3. 
R.   &  B.    3:198.      C.   493. 

128. 

Red   Cott.   5 :  34.      C.  749. 

163. 
Young  -  hearted.      Flight,   2:291. 

C.  272. 
Young-old.     R.   &  B.  3:116.     C. 

4<j0.  _ 
Youngish-old.     Inn  A.  5  :  245.     C. 
^774. 
Yourself.     J.  Lee,  4  :  161.     C.  375. 

88 
Youth.       Para.     1:49.        C.     21. 

151. 

Sor.  1 :  292.     C.  114.     76. 

King    C.    1 :  397.      C.    156. 

54- 
R.    &    B.   3:24.      C.  424. 

184. 


INDEX 

Youth 


Zuinglius 

R.  &  B.  3:40.     C.  4.30. 

166.     208. 
R.  <t  B.  3:192.     C.    490. 

232. 
R.   &  B.  3  :  .346.      C.    550. 

133. 
R.    «&    B.   3:357.     C.   554. 

236. 
R.   &  B.  3:381.      C.  5(J3. 

218. 
R.   &  B.   3:413.     C.  576. 

4- 
R.   &  B.  3:465.     C.  596. 

176. 
Ben  Ezra,  4 :  188.     C.  384. 

243. 
Adam,     6:207.       C.     916. 

160. 
Joeh.  6:219.     C.  921.     4. 
Joch.  6 :  227.     C  925.    4. 


Zany.     Para.  1  :  68.     C.  28. 
Zeal.     R.   &   B.   3:187.      C.  489, 
177. 

R.    &   B.  3:299.      C.   5.32. 

108. 

Fil.  Bald.  5:376.     C.  824. 

266. 

Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  319.     C.  961. 

239. 

Geo.  B.  D.  6 :  320.     C.  962. 

177. 
Zebra -footed.     Thro'   Met.   2:7. 

C.  165. 
Zenith.      Chris.   Sm.    6:316.      C. 

960.     152. 
Zeus.      Ixion,     6:211.       C.    918. 

209. 
Zeus-bom.      Ari.   A.   5:209.      C. 

670. 
Zeuxis.     Ari.  A.  5 :  165.     C.  654. 
Zig-zag-zigging.    Nat.  in  D.  2  :  8. 

C.  166. 
Zuinglius.     Pgra.  1 :  83.     C.  33. 
520 


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